No. The only change is the change from liquid to gas and all that happens is the particles in the water start to move faster and start to separate from one another. One particle is lighter than three and because it is hot it is less dense than air so it rises. :)
It expands to such an extent that the molecules go far from each other and they start to float forming gas (water vapor)
Scientifically water will expand when heated up even though it is the only liquid that expands when frozen
No, it will evaporate.
when water is heated the particles expand
Yes as it turns into gas.
yes
Yes.
Matter expands when it is heated.
Most substances will expand when they are heated. A few substances will contract; one example is water between zero and 4 degrees centigrade.
Well if water is too cold, pipes will contract and if water is too hot, the pipes will expand.
Sort of. In the temperature range of 0-4 Degrees Celsius water contracts when heated and expands when cooled. Outside of this temperature range it behaves normally.
Heat would cause the molecules to speed up movement and expand metals. Glass melts, paper burns, clay would shrink as water vapor escapes, etc.
Expand
No, gasses expand when heated and contract when cooled.
Liquids expand when heated and contract when cooled.
Oil does expand when heated and contracts when cooled.
Expand
Yes, in general a liquid will expand when heated. They contract when they are cooled.
Matter expands when it is heated.
No, metals always expand when heated and contract only when cooled.
Liquids expand when heated and contractwhen cooled.
Matter expands when it is heated.
expand
Most substances will expand when they are heated. A few substances will contract; one example is water between zero and 4 degrees centigrade.