There is no change; specific heat is an intensive property of a material, independent of the amount.
Applying heat to a gas will make it expand. If the volume of the gas is restricted (i.e. it cannot expand) then the pressure will increase.
It gains heat , it becomes warm because the temperature of the liquid/water increases and it expands and use up more space
Retain. And give. Off heat and energy
Amonia gas and a carbonaceous material...........apply heat! Amonia gas and a carbonaceous material...........apply heat!
Well, solids. For example, when you heat up metal is expands and when you freeze it, it contracts
asphalt
No. A drop of water and a tankerful of it have the same density. But these are two different masses of the same material. If you have, say a piece of metal and heat it up so that it expands, and there is still the same amount of substance, then the density decreases as the substance expands. Water expands as it freezes; that is why ice floats in water.
Heat does not affect it. It expands with coolness. It contracts with heat.
A Rock contracts with cold, and expands with heat.
it expands and causes pressure
My heating bill.
pretty much everything.....depends on the heat
no it expands with heat, it shrinks when cooled
it expands.
The balloon expands.
because heat expands things... and the heat expands the air in the bottle and the air in the balloon... the only place for the air to go, since it cannot expand the bottle... is out into the balloon, increasing the pressure there and inflating the balloon. :-)