Aluminum is solidified at its melting (or freezing point which is the same): 660.32 °C (933.47 K, 1220.58 °F)
As matter changes from solid to liquid (in other words when solid matter melts) the temperature remains constant. After all the solid has melted, the temperature of the matter may begin to rise again if the environment is warmer than the melting point of the solid.
Yes, the fact it can be frozen then melted means it can be a solid and a liquid. The you could boil the liquid form to turn it to a gas
food that come with melted cheese
Aluminium Titanium Steel Brass
Aluminium
The gas will condense and turn into a liquid when it is in a solid container at low temperature. The lower temperature reduces the energy of the gas molecules, causing them to come closer together and form a liquid state.
Temperature is closely linked up to volume. In a solid the species are closely packed. As temperature increase so does the molecular vibrations. At a critical temperature the vibrational energy is sufficiently high that the species break their packing and thus melt into a liquid.
Please ask 1 question at a time in the question field to receive an answer. ans no you
Gas at room temperature can transform into a solid state through a process called deposition, where the gas molecules lose energy and come together to form a solid without passing through the liquid phase.
aluminium
At a substance's melting point, none of the energy added goes into raising the temperature any more and all of it goes into breaking the bonds that hold the molecules in a solid so close and rigid. Energy added could come from a stove, for example. All of this energy goes into making the solid looser and breaking the bonds between the molecules so that the solid can become a liquid.
Yes, it is possible to change a liquid into a solid by applying pressure and reducing temperature. By reducing the temperature and increasing the pressure, the kinetic energy of the molecules in the liquid decreases, causing them to come closer together and form a solid structure. This process is known as freezing or solidification.