It contracts and takes up less space or has less preasure. If it is cooled enough it can condense (turn into a liquid) or sublimate (turn into a solid).
this is known as liquifaction if the gas is cooled to liquid.
hehe nothing your face.
The gas pressure will decrease.
The most probable answer for your your question is pure water.
Natural gas in its normal form is a gas. When natural gas is cooled to a temperature of -162 degrees C, it is compressed into a liquid is is 1/600th its original size. Liquefied natural gas is much easier to transport then compressed natural gas.
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