The density generally decreases as a substance transitions from solid to liquid to gas. In the solid state, particles are tightly packed resulting in higher density. When the substance melts into a liquid, the particles become less ordered and the density decreases. As the liquid is further heated to form a gas, the particles are further apart, leading to the lowest density.
The liquid to gas phase change is vaporizing; the reverse is condensing. The other phase changes are: - solid to liquid: melting - liquid to solid: freezing - solid to gas: sublimation - gas to solid: deposition
Freezing (Liquid 2 solid) Melting (solid 2 liquid) Boiling (liquid 2 gas) Evaporation (liquid 2 gas) Condensation (gas 2 liquid) Sublimation (solid 2 gas) hope this helped
If phases of matter are arranged in order of increasing density, it would be gas, liquid, and then solid. This is because gases have the lowest density as particles are far apart, while solids have the highest density due to particles being tightly packed.
Heating can change matter from a solid to a liquid or from a liquid to a gas. Cooling can change matter from a gas to a liquid or from a liquid to a solid.
When a solid is heated and changes to a liquid, the phase change is called melting.
solid, liquid, and gases
It depends on the density of the solid, liquid, or gas. If the density is lower than water it will float. (Water's density is about 1). Also, if the volume of the solid, liquid, or gas is bigger than the mass then it will also float. It will sink if the solid, liquid, or gas's density is higher than water's density. :)
cchemical change and energy change also the change of a gas to a liquid
Yes. The density of a liquid is usually close to that of a solid, and much higher than in a gas.
a phase change: solid to liquid: melting liquid to solid: freezing liquid to gas: vaporization gas to liquid: condensation solid to gas: sublimation gas to solid: deposition
liquid varies the most
Please note that a "change of state" involves TWO states, not just one. Using just the three most common states of matter: * A solid can change to a gas * A liquid can change to a gas * A gas can change to a liquid * A gas can change to a solid * A solid can change to a liquid * A liquid can change to a solid The first four changes in the list above involve gases.
Please note that a "change of state" involves TWO states, not just one. Using just the three most common states of matter: * A solid can change to a gas * A liquid can change to a gas * A gas can change to a liquid * A gas can change to a solid * A solid can change to a liquid * A liquid can change to a solid The first four changes in the list above involve gases.
Condensation (gas to liquid or solid or liquid to solid), vaporization (liquid or solid to gas), sublimation (solid to gas), solidification (liquid to solid), or melting (solid to liquid).
A solid, or even a gas. And back again (improved)liquid is a state of matter, which can be a solid, liquid, or gas. therefore, liquid can be changed into a solid or a gas. to do so, just change the temperature of the matter. :-D
The liquid to gas phase change is vaporizing; the reverse is condensing. The other phase changes are: - solid to liquid: melting - liquid to solid: freezing - solid to gas: sublimation - gas to solid: deposition
Temperature in this instance will not affect density, but rather pressure. The density of the gas will be much smaller than the density of a liquid or solid of the same chemical because it is a gas. The formula for density is mass over volume, and a gas has no measurable mass, making the gas always less dense than the liquid and the solid.