meltin point
This temperature is called the melting point and it is different for each substance. At the melting point, the solid begins to heat up and the particles gain enough energy to break their fixed positions and move more freely, transitioning into a liquid state.
Heavens no. Every substance has its own unique solubility constant.
Critical temperature
Every element can, but temperature depends on the element.
Different liquids boil at different temperatures. Water, for example, boils at 100 degrees Celsius, or 373 degrees Kelvin. Substances that are gases at room temperature have very low boiling points.
Every substance has a specific heat. The definition of specific heat is: The amount of energy, usually measured in calories, needed to raise the temperature of one gram of a certain substance by one degree Celsius.
A substance changes from a solid to a liquid at the substance's melting point. This is a different temperature for every substance. For example, water (ice) melts at 0oC, whereas gold melts at 1,064oC.
A substance's boiling point is the temperature at which it changes from a liquid to a gas.
The temperature in which a given substance will change from a liquid to a gas is its boiling point. Every element, compound and mixture has a different boiling point. Use an SI data book or the internet to find the boiling point of a particular suubstance.
Every substance has their own boiling point.
A liquid changes into a gas when it is heated to a certain temperature, known as the boiling point. Every substance has a different boiling point.
This is the definition of the melting point of an element or substance. The melting point is when a solid begins to turn into a liquid. A substance also has a boiling point and freezing point.
Any liquid will change into a gas at a sufficiently high temperature. Every substance has a boiling point.
There is no such substance. Because only a transformation of physical state is taking place. Let me expand: Every substance has a specific temperature at which it changes its physical state. The temp. at which the substance turns into liquid is known as melting point and the temp. at which the liquid turns to solid is known as freezing point. Usually the melting point and the freezing points of a substance are the same. (But there are certain exeptions to this rule.) So if the temperature at which the substance turns into liquid is acheived i.e the melting point - then it definitely would become liquid again.
Temperature is not magic.
the solid must reach its melting point which varies with every substance
Heavens no. Every substance has its own unique solubility constant.
Every substance has a different melting point, which means that each substance changes from solid to liquid at a different temperature called the melting point of that substance. The nmelting point of water is 0 degrees celsius.