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When you heat the particles of water, they will evaporate in to the air transforming into a gas which will later on be transferred back in to water due to condensation

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What happends when the particles in water are heated?

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What happens to particles when water is heated?

when water is heated the particles speed up, therefore gaining kinetic energy. the faster the particles move the further apart they become, therefore leading to the possibility of changing state. such as water to water vapor or ice to water.


When you heat a pan of water water particles that are heated first spread out more than the cooler water particles around them?

Yes, when you heat a pan of water, the water particles that are heated first gain energy, move faster, and spread out, creating gaps between them compared to the cooler water particles around them. This results in the heated water rising to the top as it becomes less dense, creating a convection current in the pan.


When water is heated why it gets less denser?

The particles get further away from each other as water is heated therefore making it less dense


Using particle theory how is the water heated in a domestice solar hot water system refer to particles moving energy and space between the particles?

im not telling u


Solid liquid or gas expand the most when heated?

Gases expand the most when heated compared to solids and liquids. This is because the particles in a gas have more kinetic energy and move more freely than particles in a solid or liquid, allowing for greater expansion when heated.


How are the particles of water that evaporate different from the particles that remain in the container that is being heated?

The particles (molecules) are identical, but the ones that escaped have greater kinetic energy than the ones left behind have.


What happens to the particles in a liquid when they are heated?

The particles in a liguid are bonded (not as strongly as a solid which is why it flows.) when it is heated the particles vibrate and eventually the bonds break and the particles break away. This is evaporation.


Do particles get smaller or bigger when heated?

When particles are heated or cooled, they do not change size at all. They simply move with greater kinetic energy so the space between particles increases. This prompts the changes in size we see when substances are heated or cooled.


What happens to the closeness of a material's particles when they are heated?

The particles are bonded together with some force when heat is supplied the then force between particles decreases and the start to move away from each other or we can say that the particles get that energy and become energetic and movement starts in individual particle and the force between the particles decrease. This is why when water is heated the particles detach from each other become steam.


What Heated water becomes less blank as it and temperature rises and it and particles spread apart?

It becomes less dense.


After boiling water with sugar heat retention compared to fresh water?

In my experiment, he water with sugar had the most heat retention and cooled slower than the fresh water. I'm not 100% sure why, but I think it is because it is denser, therefore, when it is heated, more particles have been heated. If there are more particles heated, then it will take longer for each particle to cool down than water which has less particles.