Solids turn into liquid. Liquid boils. Simple
Mostly they expand as they warm, contract as they cool.
liquids are really not heavier that solids. solids are acutally heavier. this is one of the properties of a solid.
Yes, liquids heat up faster than solids.
Since most of the time we are concerned with heat being transferred via conduction, the denser the material, the easier it is to conduct heat. Except for the rare anomaly (think ice vs liquid water) solids are denser than their corresponding liquid forms. All that is a gross simplification of course. Many liquids heat quite a bit better than solids and convection (which can occur in liquids but not solids) can greatly aid in the speed of "heating up", so the generalization that solids heat up faster than liquids is only a tendency rather than a rule.
Heating.
they are compromised.
Solids ---heat---> Liquids ---more heat---> gases
they all contract.
Liquids do, but solids do not.
Solids are better conductors than liquids so they solid is faster than a lquid also because since it is a better conductor is molecules move faster heating the object
SOME SOLIDS UPON HEATING ARE CHANGED DIRECTLY IN TO VAPOURS INSTEAD OF CHANGING IN TO LIQUIDS. THIS PROCESS IS CALLED SUBLIMITION.
Liquids expand more than solids on heating
Solids to Liquids (Melting) Liquids turning back into a Solid (Freezing) ((SCF))
The answer is a lot more simple than you may imagine, it is simply because the atoms and molecules in liquids havd more freedom to move about than in solids
solids and liquids
no it is a type of conduction that can happen in liquids and gases, conduction happens in solids, and radiation happens in gases