Liquid becomes gas at higher temperature (above boiling point)
Gas stays gas, there is no higher state of 'matter'.
It becomes water vapour, also known as steam which is a gas.
Heated Liquid evaporates so you can see when the liquid is boiled you see the steam which evaporates just like how the water cycle works
expands.
it expands and it becomes bigger
No, it expands- this is because when the particles in the water are heated they move around and cause the water to expand. When water is cooled it contracts. This is because the particles in the water and coming together. When water is cooled it usually becomes ice or expands a little. The volume of ice is 4x greater than water, therefore it actually expands, rather than contracting.
Pressure. Heating things expands them so when the water underground is heated is expands and pushes to the surface
hydrate
No, when matter becomes heated it always expands, meanwhile when matter becomes cool it always contracts.
Only one liquid expands when heated and thats water the most common liquid.
expands.
The water inside expands when heated.
it expands and it becomes bigger
It expands, rises, and becomes less dense.
Water expands when it freezes and becomes ice.
No, it expands- this is because when the particles in the water are heated they move around and cause the water to expand. When water is cooled it contracts. This is because the particles in the water and coming together. When water is cooled it usually becomes ice or expands a little. The volume of ice is 4x greater than water, therefore it actually expands, rather than contracting.
Matter usually expands when heated.
First the vessel expands so level falls and water expands so level increases
In almost all cases, matter expands and becomes less dense when it is heated. Melting ice is an exception.
by boling it it turns hot and becomes heated