It evaporates
It bubbles up dummy.
the viscosity of the air and the water match, at which point the water disperses enough to become sparse.
When a liquid is heated, its temperature increases causing the particles within the liquid to move more quickly. Eventually, if the temperature is high enough, the liquid may reach its boiling point and transition into a gas state through the process of vaporization.
The change of state that occurs when lead is heated and turns into a liquid is called melting.
When heated to its boiling point.
A heated liquid become a gas at the boiling point.
All liquids have an eventual boiling point, some of them are just incredibly hard to do because of the extreme amount of heat needed. Boiling a liquid is just the process by which atoms of the substance are heated enough to have enough energy to break free from the molecular bonds of the surface of the liquid and float into the air as a gas.
The process of bubbles escaping the surface of a heated liquid is called boiling. It happens when the liquid reaches its boiling point and the vapor pressure equals the atmospheric pressure, causing bubbles to form and rise to the surface.
Melting point is when ice (solid), for example at room temperature, turns into water (liquid). Boiling point is when the melted water is heated until it boils and starts to bubble and give off steam - getting hot enough to scald.
No, steam is not superheated water. Steam is the gaseous form of water that is created when water is heated to its boiling point and vaporizes. Superheated water is water that has been heated beyond its boiling point and exists in a state where it is hotter than its boiling point.
Most materials expand when they are heated. If they are heated enough, they may change from solid to liquid, or from liquid to gaseous forms.
As water is heated, the water molecules gain kinetic energy and they move faster. Eventually, they get enough kinetic energy to move fast enough to escape the liquid phase and become a gas/vapor. This is the boiling point.