When water boils it changes from a liquid state to a gaseous state.
When water is boiled it changes from liquid to a gas.
Water changes from a liquid phase to a gaseous phase when it is boiled.
It changes to a gas (steam).
The state of matter changes from liquid to gas when water is boiled in a pan on a stove.
It's still water, it just changes from a liquid to a gas.
The amount stays the same but some of it changes to steam and water vapour and it will disappear.
Boiled water will not rust as rusting is a chemical reaction between iron and oxygen in the presence of water. Boiling water simply changes its state from liquid to gas (water vapor) and does not directly cause rusting.
Water changes from a liquid to gas when boiled. (boiling point = 110 Celsius)
No, boiled water is simply boiled. Distilled water is when the steam from the boiling is gathered and rebottled.
Boiled water.
It is a physical change because the water only changes its state from liquid to gas.
Evaporation, as when water is boiled. It changes phase, from a liquid to water vapor, a gas which is invisible.