It would be added thermal energy to break intermolecular attractions
A change in phase can result from adding or removing thermal energy. For example, adding heat can change a solid to a liquid or a liquid to a gas, while removing heat can change a gas to a liquid or a liquid to a solid.
Adding thermal energy can increase the temperature of a substance, leading to changes in its physical state (melting, boiling), chemical reactions, or expansion. Removing thermal energy can lower the temperature, causing the substance to condense, freeze, or contract.
The thermal energy of a system can be altered by changing the temperature, adding or removing heat, or changing the material or phase of the system.
Adding thermal energy can cause a substance to change from a solid to a liquid or from a liquid to a gas, through processes like melting or boiling. Removing thermal energy can cause a substance to change from a gas to a liquid or from a liquid to a solid, through processes like condensation or freezing.
Heated refers to raising the temperature of something, while cooled refers to lowering the temperature. Heating involves adding thermal energy to increase temperature, while cooling involves removing thermal energy to decrease temperature.
Thermal energy can change the state of a substance by providing enough energy to break the intermolecular forces holding the particles together. For example, adding thermal energy can melt a solid into a liquid or boil a liquid into a gas. Conversely, removing thermal energy can cause a gas to condense into a liquid or a liquid to freeze into a solid.
Something that transfers thermal energy efficiently is called a conductor.
it heats up
It doesn't, Temperature is a MEASURE of the thermal energy state of something.
Matter I think I'm not 100% shure but it say in my book matter in one state often can change to another state by adding or removing thermal energy
Adding thermal energy increase the evaporation.
Adding thermal energy to a gas increases the average kinetic energy of its particles, causing them to move faster and collide more frequently. This leads to an increase in the gas pressure and volume. If enough thermal energy is added, the gas may eventually change phase to become a plasma.