never
yes it's called the triple point. place an ice cube in a frying pan on the stove. all three states exist yes it's called the triple point. place an ice cube in a frying pan on the stove. all three states exist
Yes, in fact it is possible. When ice is on the process of freezing in an ice tray, the outer surfaces of the ice is frozen (solid) whereas the inner part of the ice cube is still liquid. This is because coldness reaches the outer part of the water before reaching the inner part. Coldness also has to pass through the outer part become coming into contact with the inner part.
an Amorphis Solid
A solid and liquid have the same mass if the amount is the same.
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
No, Gas--->liquid (condensation). Solid---->liquid (melting)
For any given substance the melting point and the freezing point are the SAME temperature. However, if the substance is increasiung in heat to move from solid to liquid then it is the MELTING POINT. If that same substance is losing heat to move from liquid to solid then it is the FREEZING POINT. Similarly, when moving from liquid to gas ity is the boiling point , and when moving from gas to liquid it is the condensing point.
At the same time, no. Being solid and liquid at the same time would be like being hot and cold at the same time.
an Amorphis Solid
Water can be a solid, liquid, and gas at the same time. This is due to the varying energies of the molecules while they are in a changing state.
A solid and liquid have the same mass if the amount is the same.
liquid to solid
solid/solid liquid/liquid both the same substances together
Impossible. Boiling is when a liquid turns into a gas, freezing is when it turns into a solid. Obviously, the same molecules cannot be a gas and a solid at the same time. Mixtures of a liquid and a suspended solid might appear to "freeze" when boiled because they thicken when the liquid boils away, but this is not true freezing.
this is because the amount of solute in the solution will have the same number of moles as that of the solid.
When we suck it, it is solid but after some time it becomes liquid
Well solid to liquid the heat speeds up the molecules and same for liquid to gas but from liquid to solid the coolant slows the molecules down
It is in the liquid crystalline state of matter.
Yes. A substance melts and freezes at the same temperature. Melting is as it changes from solid to liquid, freezing is from liquid to solid.