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Q: What is happening to the particles of water in ice as it turns to liquid using the particle model of matter?
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What happen to the particles of a liquid as it vaporizes?

The liquid particles gain energy (usually from thermal energy, i.e. heat) and start to get "excited." This means they vibrate and eventually break away from the surface of the liquid and into the surrounding gas. This particle of matter is still present, but not in liquid form.


What are the the characteristics property of matter?

matter are composed by particles,particles are very small,particle have space between them


What are the characteristics of the properties of matter?

matter are composed by particles,particles are very small,particle have space between them


Where are there no particles of matter?

That's actually impossible unless you look between the particles of matter. Particles = more than one particle.


What are microscopic particles of matter that are smaller than molecules?

particle


What are microscope particles of matter that are smaller than molecules?

particle


What does a elementary particles do?

What elementary particles do would depend on what type of particle they are. For example, there are antimatter particles, force particles, and matter particles.


Each fundamental atomic particle has an opposite particle. A collision of these opposites will result in the annihilation of each particle. What are these types of particles called?

Anti-particles. In the case of the (normal negatively-charged) electron, the anti-particle has a specific name; the positron. Since normal particles are the building blocks of matter, a collection of anti-particles are termed "anti-matter".


Does all matter obey the particle theory?

yes because all matter has particles


Do liquids have a higher particle speed than solids?

Yes. Liquids are liquid because the particles are moving fast and bumping into each other so you get the sliding motion of liquid. Solids have the slowest particle movement of any form of matter. For the longest time it was believed that the particles in solids do not even move, however, scientists have found that the particles do move as they simply vibrate in place.


What does the brownian motion tell us about the particles in matter?

Random moving of the particles specially in the liquid or gaseous medium. This is caused due to the collisions of the atom and the molecules in the medium. Better understandability is provided in particle theory


How do particle matter behave?

I know that particles in matter move a lot but i not quite sure what it means