It is a matter of timing. The correct answer is most likely yes. At some scale all objects would expand before exploding. If you were to watch a bomb go off on a video and watched on a film that captued 20 frames a second you would not see it expand. If it captured 500 frames per second, again you may not see it. At 10,000 frames per second (not possable that I am aware of) you would watch the bomb expand prior to the skin of it rupturing. If a bomb exploded but did not have enough explosives in it, it would most certainly just expand and not rupture (explode)
Yes, usually.
Yes, the more temperature an object has the farther apart the molecules move.
to start a fire you must have 3 things oxygen heat and fuel.
When objects get hot enough they can catch on fire. Different objects will require different degrees of heat, and oxygen must be present to support a fire.
The contents of the glass envelope expand and break the envelope. That allows the valve to open and release the water. The contents expand more than the tube.
cool Actually, when there is warm air, like in a balloon it will expand. When you go outside, the balloon will shrink if it is cold outside. When you go back into the warm indoors, the balloon will go back to its normal size.
All objects do not expand on heating.....Only metals expand on heating.....non metals like wood,plastic,etc do not expand on heating.
Expand
peper
Most metals do.
They expand because their molecules vibrate more rapidly resulting in more space between the molecules which makes the object expand.
railway lines made of metal expand. submitted by a G
Yes it is a metahpor since it is comparing 2 objects, you and fire.
Once ignited, fire could catch other objects on fire. In a sense, yes it can.
same number of atoms theoretically... yet cold objects collect water vapor cold objects shrink and hot objects expand with the exception of water.
Yes, the more temperature an object has the farther apart the molecules move.
earth/wind/fire/water
heater fire stove sun