When a body freezes, its particles vibrate in place.
no but the particles in a solid vibrate
No, the vibrations depend on how much energy the particles have. If a solid is heated from the left side, the particles on the left will vibrate more than the particles on the right. Solid particles vibrate as each individual particle, not as a group or around a fixed point.
Particles vibrate because of heat being present
Heat is a form of energy, you are adding energy to the system, this causes the particles to vibrate faster.
Particles vibrate faster when they are heated.
When a body freezes, its particles vibrate in place.
No, they vibrate faster.
they can vibrate
All states of matter have vibrating particles, but solids' particles vibrate only.
no but the particles in a solid vibrate
No, the vibrations depend on how much energy the particles have. If a solid is heated from the left side, the particles on the left will vibrate more than the particles on the right. Solid particles vibrate as each individual particle, not as a group or around a fixed point.
Not to my knowledge, they only vibrate if they are heated
what is a fixed position and vibrate on the spot
Heat energy from the source causes the particles to oscillate (vibrate) this chains and causes neighbouring particles to vibrate.
Particles vibrate because of heat being present
The particles of a solid can only vibrate about their fixed positions while the particles of a liquid can vibrate, rotate and translate (move from 1 place to another) within the liquid.