No, heating a liquid makes it's particles move farther apart (makes the liquid expand). This is most readily observed in an old glass thermometer. As your temperature goes up (as you heat the liquid in the thermometer), the liquid inside expands and travels up the thermometer.
No it makes the molecules move farther apart
As you know water particles are as not close together like a solid. When you heat water the particles vibrate and move around more, they don't move it closer together.
No. Evaporation makes particles move further apart.
No particle can reach the speed of light. Mass increases with speed, and the particle would become infinitely massive as it came closer to the speed of light.
Well solid to liquid the heat speeds up the molecules and same for liquid to gas but from liquid to solid the coolant slows the molecules down
It depends on how much heat and what liquid it is. If it loses just a few degrees on heat it just becomes colder. If it loses alot of heat then it becomes a solid
slowly heat it up?
Because the calories of heat are being transferred from the heat source to the liquid, and as they build up in the liquid the temperature goes up. They will continue to build up until one of two things happens: the heat source and the liquid become the same temperature, or the liquid becomes saturated with heat. When a liquid reaches its boiling point, it has become saturated and will get no hotter. Pure water in an open container saturates with heat at 212 degrees F. Unless you put something in the water to raise its boiling point, like ethylene glycol, or you put the water in a pressure vessel, it cannot get any hotter than 212 degrees F.
They start to speed up and expand.
When you heat up a particle up so fast it travels at the speed of light, you have moved to a different universe because that is impossible in this universe. The wormhole you went through was strictly one way. You can not come back. Bye.
No particle can reach the speed of light. Mass increases with speed, and the particle would become infinitely massive as it came closer to the speed of light.
Well solid to liquid the heat speeds up the molecules and same for liquid to gas but from liquid to solid the coolant slows the molecules down
steam is formed when you heat up a liquid, like water. the heat gives energy to the particles, which brackes the bond the holds the particles together and the particles loosen up and flows freely , which is a property of a gas.
It depends on how much heat and what liquid it is. If it loses just a few degrees on heat it just becomes colder. If it loses alot of heat then it becomes a solid
You throw up
heat doesnt travel from a solid to a liquid. a solid is heated up and turned into a liquid.
heat the liquid up to its boiling point
it doesn't it raises the average energy a particle has. that's temperature not heat.
The Particles Vibrate , Causing the liquid to evaporate leaving behind a gas. ! Sophie :)
VISCOSITY generally decreases with increase in temperature.(a factor responsible for cleaning action of soap) .There might be exceptions.