Yes indeed. The triple point of water at 273.16oK (Kelvin) is one of the points used to define the temperature scale. Many other substances exhibit a triple point.
This is the name given to the point at which the two or three phases may coexist at the one temperature and pressure.
Two different types of matter, or even two types of the same matter, can never occupy the same space at the same time. They can intermingle, I suppose, but if there's not enough room, one of them will be pushed out.
Solid, liquid or gas are the classical states of matter.
all things if they are heated or cooled enough except alcohol i dont think that freezes
Yes. It may take extremely high temperatures to make them evaporate, or extremely low temperatures to make them freeze, but they can.
H2O.
when it's a solid, it is ice.
when it's a gas, it is water vapor.
when it's a liquid, it is water.
Gas and Gas
water
No.
Vasity
CH3F is both liquid and solid noble gas solution.
Both transitions, from solid to liquid and liquid to gas are purely Physical Changes. There is nothing Chemical happening.
Not quite sure what you are asking but there are flames with both solid and liquid fuels
These nine types of solution are solid to solid solid to liquid solid to gas liquid to solid liquid to liquid liquid to gas gas to solid gas to liquid gas to gas
a feather is a solid
liquid and gas because they both have an ability to flow
It has both liquid and solid parts.
Melting (solid -> liquid) Evaporating (liquid -> gas) Subliming (solid -> gas) or (gas -> solid) both are called sublimation Condensing (gas-> liquid) freezing (liquid -> solid)
CH3F is both liquid and solid noble gas solution.
Solid
Gas.
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
liquidI would say that it is actually both a liquid and a solid. It definitely is NOT a gas. It "sticks" together like a solid, but still has the viscosity, or fluidity, of a liquid.
A gas and a liquid will both take the shape of their container. However only a gas will take on the volume of its container as well.
If by "earth" you mean dirt, then solid. If by "earth" you mean our planet Earth, then it is liquid, solid, and gas. Our planet has multiple layers. The inner core is a solid. The outer core is molten (semi-liquid), the mantle is solid, and the atmosphere is a gas.
solid
Both transitions, from solid to liquid and liquid to gas are purely Physical Changes. There is nothing Chemical happening.