Lava is actually just rock in its liquid form - it's not sulfur. If it were, you would know it because at the temperature of lava, it burns and produces the nasty-smelling gas sulfur dioxide.
You'll start gagging and coughing from the smell when you get anywhere near a molten-sulfur flow.
I can honestly say i have never smelt lava? :/
and as the molten lava overflow the crest of the volcano, all the people could do is watch in horror.
Yes, molten sulfur expands when heated due to the increase in thermal energy causing the sulfur molecules to move more rapidly and occupy a larger volume.
You +1'd this publicly. Undo Molten sulfur assumes a dark red color above 200 °C.
The three states of sulfur are solid (as a yellow crystal), liquid (molten sulfur), and gas (sulfur vapor).
you could find molten lava and a burning core
Molten sulfur is sulfur that has been heated to its melting point, which is around 115°C. At this temperature, sulfur changes from a solid state to a liquid state. Molten sulfur is commonly used in industrial processes such as sulfuric acid production and as a component in certain chemicals.
Lava refers specifically to molten rock that flows on the surface of the Earth during a volcanic eruption. Molten rock, on the other hand, is the hot, liquid rock below the Earth's surface that has not yet erupted. Essentially, all lava is molten rock, but not all molten rock is lava.
Lava, or molten lava.
Most likely an igneous rock can withstand molten lava.
A product of the solidification of magma or molten lava is igneous rock.
Streams of molten lava out of a volcano are called 'lava flows'.
I can honestly say i have never smelt lava? :/
Lava and magma are both molten rock beneath the Earth's surface. The main difference is that magma is molten rock below the surface, while lava is molten rock that has reached the surface through volcanic eruption.
The molten hot lava was hardening.
Victoria falls is made out of molten lava.
Molten rock on the surface of the Earth is called lava.