its chngein 2 a liquid
its chngein 2 a liquid
no.the particle never disappear,the water just change its properties of particles when melting to ice
As a block of ice finishes melting, the particles gain enough energy to break the bonds holding them in place. This increased energy causes the particles to move more freely, transitioning from a solid to a liquid state.
it depends on wether you are freezing the liquid, or melting the liquid.
Scientifically speaking, the ice is probably melting because of the particles in the air/water/wherever the ice is. The particles in the air speed up the particles in the ice causing it to melt.
Nothing until it hits its melting point. Once it hits its melting point, its particles begin to move more freely, and the solid turns into a liquid.
They stay right in the salt shaker where they are suppose to be.
When particles reach their melting point, they absorb enough energy to transition from a solid to a liquid state while maintaining their molecular structure. During melting, the particles gain kinetic energy, causing them to vibrate more rapidly and move further apart, which leads to the solid substance turning into a liquid.
Solid water (ice) changes to water vapor through the process of sublimation, where it goes directly from a solid to a gas without melting into a liquid first. This occurs at temperatures below the melting point of ice, typically caused by heat or reduced air pressure.
They become separated from one another and individually get surrounded by the water particles.
They might by the snowman melting and washed into the ocean
They can flow around since they're not as tightly packed anymore.