Try 'Wikipedia' under 'Freezing Points'.
the molecules for different liquids are structured differently, and the time and energy it takes to form bonds and break bonds between adjacent molecules determines the freezing and melting points for various liquids.
Different liquids have different freezing points. For water, it's 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 0 degrees Celsius.
a glass with ice and water
Very...if u r not careful they are 99.9% flamable!
In most cases, two mixed liquids can best be separated by the process of distillation, in which the liquid with the lower boiling point is boiled off and collected as vapor, and it can then condense back into a liquid. It is also possible to separate two mixed liquids by cooling them to the point that one of the liquids freezes; no two liquids would have exactly the same freezing point, just as they do not have exactly the same boiling point (of course, if the freezing points or the boiling points are very close, that makes the separation process harder).
This depends on the freezing point.
different liquids have different freezing points. For water its 0 degrees Celsius but other liquids will have different freezing points because of the element that make it up and the size of its molecules first you need to pick a liquid, they all have different freezing points.
Different liquids have different freezing points. For water its 0 degrees celcius but other liquids will have different freezing points because of the element that make it up and the size of its molocules. ;)
yes different liquids have different freezing temperatures
the molecules for different liquids are structured differently, and the time and energy it takes to form bonds and break bonds between adjacent molecules determines the freezing and melting points for various liquids.
No. All liquids have different specific freezing points. Some liquids may have the same point, but that doesnt change anything.
Different liquids have different freezing points. For water, it's 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 0 degrees Celsius.
For liquids to solidify, the temperature of the liquid must be below its freezing point. Every substance has a different freezing point. For example, water's freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius. At 1 degree, it will be a liquid. If you cool it down to -1, it will solidify.
Boiling point is the temperature at which the atmospheric temperature becomes equal to temperature of the liquid......hence it completly depends upon the atmospheric temperature and the temperature of the liquid.....so different liquids will have different boiling points......
no :(
Freezing.
32 degrees