the temperature increases
The water molecules remain unchanged.
yes because when we boil water than some of the molecules ..let's say all of the molecules are removed from the water. So if one part of molecules is removed than obviously the water's temperature falls.
It Freezes ! :P
This water is absorbed by plants.
the bonds between the water molecules are broken
The molecules freeze.
The molecules freeze.
water molecules lose energy to their surroundings, causing the molecules to move less, thus the liquid water becomes a solid
When we removed ice to freeze its molcule absorb heat which is present surrounding if heat is above melting point of it then its molcles keep distance between each other and act as a fuild,
The oxygen atoms left behind from the water molecules join into diatomic oxygen molecules.
Water becomes ice cubes in a freezer.
I think you need to try this. Put water in the freezer and see what happens.
The freezer takes heat out of the air in it, and discards the heat elsewhere. As long as the air in the freezer is colder than the water in the ice-cube tray, heat flows out of the water into the air around it, and is removed by the freezer. If the temperature of that air happens to be lower than the melting/freezing point of water, then the water eventually freezes at some time during the process.
The hydrogen bonds between the water molecules in the liquid are broken.
The water molecules remain unchanged.
The sugar molecules dissipate throughout the water - mixing with the water molecules.
The liquid molecules are transformed in gas molecules.