If the solid is made of ice, then it will melt. But if you have enough heat, you can make the solid item melt.
It melts into a solid.
The energy must be supplied to the solid so that it melts.
Typically the solid will both increase in temperature and expand, as the heat energy delivered to the solid causes its molecules to vibrate faster and to increase their spacing.
when it absorbs heat temp increases if heat sufficient enough then changes into the liquid state if heat is released then the temp decreases if it is high then it gets feezed
The same with when a light hits a solid; the energy either gets reflected or absorbed. If light hits a dark colored solid, most of the light will be absorbed, and the black object will get warm.If light hits a light-colored solid, most of the light will be reflected, and the white object will stay cool.By the way, the same thing happens to both heat and light, because heat is a form of light; heat is also called infrared light.Further answerIt does depend somewhat on what form this heat is in. If it's radiation then the answer above is fine. But if it's in the form of say, hot air, then there won't be any reflection, just conduction of the heat from the air to the solid.
It melts into a solid.
When this happens,the liquid loses all its heat & becomes solid.
Nothing does.
Solids ---heat---> Liquids ---more heat---> gases
The energy must be supplied to the solid so that it melts.
it melts
It turns red and burns.
when solid has already melted and when heat is supplied it starts increasing the temperature of liquid
The temperature will decrease. If enough heat is removed the liquid may become a solid.
If a solid is subjected to heat, it will expand. On reaching its melting point, the solid will become liquid. At boiling point it will convert in to gaseous form. These are the three states of a matter.
Nothing? If you do nothing to it, nothing will happen to it.
At the right amount of heat it will melt.