Gas...The molecules are less tightly packed together like in a solid and liquid so they're free to move. They seem more energized, they're faster.
I might be wrong, but I would say slower. If you mean energy in form of heat, molecules move slower if the liquid is colder, so if a liquid releases energy in form of heat (turns ¨cooler¨), than the molecules move slower. As I said, I might be wrong. Just my thoughts
When heat is applied to a solid, it increases the kinetic energy of the molecules, causing them to vibrate faster and move farther apart. This disrupts the ordered arrangement of the molecules in a solid, eventually leading to a phase change into a liquid.
Solid. The molecules are compacted together and vibrate at high speeds. Liquid. The molecules are still close together but are not fixed and can roll around each other. they spread to take the shape of the container. the molecules move at even higher speeds than solid. Gas. The molecules are far away from each other and move even faster than water Molecules. the spread out or shrink inward to meet the shape of the container.
During a phase change from liquid to gas, molecules gain energy to overcome the intermolecular forces holding them together in the liquid state. As they absorb energy, molecules start to move faster and break free from their fixed positions, eventually leading to a transition to the less dense gas phase.
When molecules are evenly distributed through a solid, liquid, or gas, we say that the substance is in equilibrium. In a solid, the molecules are tightly packed and vibrate in place. In a liquid or gas, the molecules move freely and randomly.
Molecules in a liquid move faster than in a solid because the intermolecular forces in a liquid are weaker, allowing molecules to move around more freely. In a solid, molecules are held tightly in a fixed position by strong intermolecular forces.
Molecules actually move faster in liquid because they have more space between them to move about. That's why liquid can flow, and a solid cannot. =)
It becomes a liquid. solid, liquid, and gas are relative terms defining the movement of molecules, solid moves slow, liquid faster, and gas the fastest. molecules move constantly.
Basically, a solid is quite stationary. It doesn't move very much. Liquids have more energy, meaning that the particles move a lot freer. In a gas the particles are a lot further apart, meaning that they have a LOT more space to move. Solids can be made to move faster if you give it enough energy (ie, heat). The atoms then start vibrating faster, making spaces between the atoms. This is what happens (basically) when you melt something.
Sound will usually move faster in a solid than in a liquid.
When the liquid molecules are heated, they move faster so the liquid boils and some molecules becomes gas molecules. When the liquid molecules are heated, they move faster so the liquid boils and some molecules becomes gas molecules.
As the molecules in a body move with increased speed, i.e. increasing kinetic energy, it is possible that the body will change from the solid phase to the liquid phase, or the liquid phase to the gas phase, and in some cases from the solid directly to the gas phase.
I might be wrong, but I would say slower. If you mean energy in form of heat, molecules move slower if the liquid is colder, so if a liquid releases energy in form of heat (turns ¨cooler¨), than the molecules move slower. As I said, I might be wrong. Just my thoughts
When heat is applied to a solid, it increases the kinetic energy of the molecules, causing them to vibrate faster and move farther apart. This disrupts the ordered arrangement of the molecules in a solid, eventually leading to a phase change into a liquid.
yes
When matter melts (changes from a solid to a liquid state), its molecules move faster, meaning they are gaining energy.
When the molecules in a body move with increased speed, it is possible for the body to undergo changes in state based on the amount of energy present. As molecules move faster, they may transition from a solid to a liquid, and then from a liquid to a gas due to the increase in kinetic energy. This change in state is a result of the balance between intermolecular forces and thermal energy affecting the arrangement of particles in the substance.