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Solids can turn directly into gases without ever being a liquid. Carbon dioxide (dry ice) is a common example of this. The process is called sublimation. Gases can also change directly into a solid without ever becoming a liquid. This process is called deposition. I sub freezing temperatures water vapor changes directly into ice crystals. The formation of frost, and snow in clouds, are both examples of deposition.

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13y ago
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14y ago

i need a bit more information in order to answer this but i might know what u r saying.

i need a bit of clarification on this part tho:

so u have a solid and the solid turns to a liquid. is it that SAME liquid that is turning to a gas or are u just talking about liquids in general.

i dont really get your question but i think i can be of some help.

if an object is in a closed system then it will still have the same mass no matter what state the object turns into. i think this might be true with weight also, but im not sure

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9y ago

an explosion

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12y ago

the watercycle starts

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Q: Can a solid turn into a gas and then into a solid again?
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