It is 83.8 K.
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∙ 7y ago189.19°C Is the freezing point. Or melting point of Argon.
The melting point and boiling point of argon are 83.81 K and 87.302 K respectively. So argon is liquid in between these two temperatures.
Freezes the fastest can be of 2 mean. For liquid to reach the freezing point first, the liquid with higher molecular mass or stronger intermolecular force would have higher freezing point and can be considered freezing faster. But it might took quite a while to freeze at the freezing point. For liquid to become solid with the least energy transfer required. The liquid with the lowest intermolecular force would change the state faster at freezing point. But the freezing point might be extremely low.
A liquid at the freezing point might remain a liquid indefinitely if no more heat is removed. A liquid in frozen state might remain frozen indefinitely, too. If the liquid is very pure, it might remain a liquid even when carefully brought below the freezing point. It would shift phases if some impurity or movement disturbs the liquid. If enough additional heat (heat of fusion) is removed from a liquid at the freezing point then the liquid will freeze without changing temperature. If a frozen liquid has the heat of fusion added to it, it will melt without changing temperature.
They are the same, though a liquid's freezing point can vary. For example, magma's freezing point is quite high, and water's freezing point is lower, at 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
189.19°C Is the freezing point. Or melting point of Argon.
Liquid argon is much colder than the freezing point of water, and water ice has virtually no solubility in argon. Water is a polar compound, and argon is non-polar.
Liquid argon is much colder than the freezing point of water, and water ice has virtually no solubility in argon. Water is a polar compound, and argon is non-polar.
The melting point and boiling point of argon are 83.81 K and 87.302 K respectively. So argon is liquid in between these two temperatures.
No it would be the boiling point. At freezing point it becomes solid
effect of pressure and impurties on the freezing and boiling point of liquids
yes the melting point of solid and freezing point of liquid of a substance is differ but in the case of water the melting and freezing point is same.
There are three states of matter: gas, liquid and solid. The melting point is where a solid turns to liquid. The freezing point is where a liquid turns to solid.
Boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid changes into a gas. Freezing point is the temperature at which a liquid changes into a solid.
When solid start to turn into liquid its melting point. When liquid start turning into solid its freezing point.
Freezing and melting points are synonyms: at this temperature a solid become a liquid or a liquid become a solid.
Simple: a transformation from a solid to a liquid.