The Ideal Gas Laws describe the relationship of temperature, pressure, and volume for a gas. These three things are all related. At lower temperatures a gas will exert lower pressure if the volume remains the same, or can exert the same pressure but in a smaller volume.
this is known as liquifaction if the gas is cooled to liquid.
contrast
Natural gas is compressed when it is cooled. When cooled to a temperature of -162 Degrees, it becomes liquid.
A gas is a gas, as the name suggests. It can, along with liquid be referred to as a fluid. Cooled and pressurised sufficiently it can become a liquid and cooled further, a solid.
When a gas is changed to a liquid the gas has condensed, or liquefied or cooled.
When a gas is heated up, the particles within the gas start to move faster, going farther apart (expansion). When a gas is cooled, the particles slow down and it starts to condense (contract), and if cooled enough, into a liquid.
The atoms loose kenetic energy and bounce around slower. This causes the gas to have less preasure and, if cooled enough, can cause the gas to condense into a liquid or sublimate into a solid.
A solid gas, like dry ice (frozen carbon dioxide), is already frozen and will continue to be frozen if it is cooled. If a liquid is cooled to its freezing point, then it will freeze and become a solid.
a liquid then if cooled further it would turn into a solid a liquid then if cooled further it would turn into a solid
it'll slow down.
A bose-einstein condensate.
yes