imagine that you are heating a pan of tap water on a cooker and taking
the temperature of the water with a thermometer every two minutes until
after the water has boiled
Liquid to solid
after a while it disappears because of evaporationAnswer:Water does not disappear when it boils. It changes state from a liquid to a gas and diffuses into the air. The gaseous water can be cndenses back into a liquid.
Liquid boils when it reaches 100 degrees Fahrenheit.Additional answerHey, come on! Not all liquids boil at 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Water boils at 100 degrees centigrade, for example. Each liquid has a different boiling point.
Water boils quicker than oil and washing up liquid. This is because water has a lower boiling point compared to oil and washing up liquid. Oil and washing up liquid have higher boiling points, which means it will take longer for them to reach the boiling point compared to water.
Nothing. It is a liquid. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius, and boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
The water goes from the liquid state to the gas state. H2O(l) -> H2O(g)
When water boils, it forms bubbles of water vapor. This happens because the heat energy makes the water molecules move faster and break free from the liquid, turning into gas. The bubbles you see are the water vapor escaping from the liquid water.
the particles are given more energy.
Liquid to solid
imagine that you are heating a pan of tap water on a cooker and taking the temperature of the water with a thermometer every two minutes until after the water has boiled
First the liquid gets hot, then it boils becoming a gas.
if water boils a liquid it becomes a liquid not a solid
Steam condences into water, water freezes in to ice, ice melts into water, water boils to steam
The water becomes a gas.
It boils until it evaporates.
When water freezes it changes from a liquid to a solid. When water boils or evaporates it changes from a liquid to a gas.
Boils or evaporates