its called water
This happens because the hotter a substance is, the faster its atoms or molecules are moving. They have more mobility and can get around faster.
When a substance is heated, the kinetic energy of its particles increases. This leads to the particles moving faster and colliding more frequently with each other and the container they are in.
Yes, generally the faster molecules are moving, the greater their energy. This manifests as higher temperature, and (for gases) higher pressure.
When heat is added to molecules, their kinetic energy increases, causing them to move faster and vibrate more vigorously. This increased motion leads to the molecules spreading out and occupying more space, as well as potentially changing state from solid to liquid or liquid to gas, depending on the substance.
When something is heated the particles inside it begin to move faster and faster and that causes the heat, when something is frozen the opposite occurs the particles inside it move slower and slower and probably stop moving all together
No, heat makes the particles move faster. If you remove the heat the particles will start moving slower as it cools down.
the hotter it is, the faster they are moving
As molecules absorb heat, their kinetic energy increases, causing them to move faster. This increased speed leads to higher temperatures and can result in changes of state, such as melting or boiling, depending on the substance.
the particles in the substance begin moving rapidly and move further apart
Yes, generally the faster molecules are moving, the greater their energy. This manifests as higher temperature, and (for gases) higher pressure.
The particles start moving faster and the matter expands.
I actually blew smoke to a snail and I swear it started moving faster