ok im kinda guessing but is will turn to water because it will cool. then i think it will fall pack to what it came from. that what im guessing so please correct this
The word "change" can be used with the phrase "of state" to describe a transition or transformation from one condition or form to another. For example, "The boiling water underwent a change of state to become steam."
physical change because you are not doing anything to the object to change its ingredients or the way it is constructed and all you are really doing is adding heat.
The napkin will get wet and will form water vapor.
Blue litmus paper would turn red in ferric chloride solution due to the acidic nature of the solution, which would cause a change in the pH of the litmus paper turning it to red.
When water reaches its boiling point (212oF), its phase changes to gas through the process of evaporation.
Freeze the liquid (put into freezer).
You need to cool it down.
It would shrink (according to Charles's Law).
Njc all the way
nothing
Highly unlikely.
They will dry out, but not in a good way. They would be freezer-burned rather than freeze-dried.
it would probably crack
Oh, dude, if you stick a Twizzler in the freezer overnight, its ductility would totally change! Ductility is the ability of a material to stretch without breaking, and when you freeze a Twizzler, it becomes super brittle and snaps easily. So yeah, freezing a Twizzler would definitely mess with its stretchiness.
If you happen to find a freezer big enough to hold a body the chocolate will probably harden, but this will also lower the body temperature and may cause hypothermia, which can result in death.
Because of the very low temperature inside a freezer, the sudden temperature change in the bulb when it switches on would make it pop.
They both blow steam