Molten rock in any of Earth's layers is called magma. The mantle is actually composed of solid, but very hot and plastic-like rock.
Example of solid changing toliquid:when you take an ice and put it to thaw out it changes to water (liquid) and is the same for liquid to solid; you freeze water(liquid) and it turns to ice (solid)
liquid with a average density of approximately of 11 g/m^3
Theoretically, anything can be changed from a solid to a liquid with enough energy added. Consequently, any gas can be changed into a liquid when enough energy is removed from it.
A gas turning into a liquid is called condensation.
Magma is not plasma since plasma is neither solid ,liquid or gas while magma is always solid when cool and liquid when hot.
Lava is molten rock. The rock deep inside the earths mantle is always molten, and when it occasionally breaks through to the surface, the opening is called a volcano, and the liquid rock spilling out of the top is lava.
The mantle is dominantly solid. Any molten material within it is generally called "melt" (used as a noun). It could also be correctly referred to as magma, but this usage is less common.
That would be called magma.
Molten liquid rock inside Earth's mantle is called
lava or magma because magma is the molten rock inside the volcano and lava is the molten rock that's on the earths crust or outside of the volcano.
Its spinning, molten, liquid, iron core.
Molten rock..IE lava or magma
The outer core is a liquid that is in between the inner core and mantle. It is 2,000km thick.
hydrosphere
Liquid or molten rock is called magma when it is below the ground and lava when it flows above the ground.
When a substance is heated, it absorbs energy in the form of heat, causing its molecules to gain kinetic energy and vibrate more rapidly. Eventually, the substance's molecular bonds weaken, allowing the particles to move more freely and rearrange into a liquid state. This process is called melting.
The Liquid Outer Core.