liquid & vapor
This depends on the temperature.
Sublimation is the process of a solid to gas without being turned into a liquid. One must find a phase diagram of the substance. The triple point where all three phases can mannerly exist. So when one finds point below this, and a pressure and temperature where liquid doesn't exist the solid will become gas.
This point is call the "triple point" and this is where all three lines meet together on the phase diagram.
One interesting use is to define a temperature standard - the triple point of water (or any substance, for that matter) is at a very precise temperature. On the other hand, the melting point or the boiling point depends on pressure.One interesting use is to define a temperature standard - the triple point of water (or any substance, for that matter) is at a very precise temperature. On the other hand, the melting point or the boiling point depends on pressure.One interesting use is to define a temperature standard - the triple point of water (or any substance, for that matter) is at a very precise temperature. On the other hand, the melting point or the boiling point depends on pressure.One interesting use is to define a temperature standard - the triple point of water (or any substance, for that matter) is at a very precise temperature. On the other hand, the melting point or the boiling point depends on pressure.
Solid, liquid, and gas exist together. Apex
All three phases.
liquid & vapor
liquid & vapor
... the substance can exist in the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases all at the same time.
The triple point of a substance is the temperature and pressure at which all three phases are in equilibrium. The exact temperature and pressure depend upon the identity of the substance.
Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".Yes. In fact, there is a specific combination of pressure and temperature where the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases can co-exist. Do some reading on "triple point".
This depends on the temperature.
The triple point of a phase diagram is the location where the solid, liquid, and gas phases meet; it is the temperature and pressure at which a given substance can assume any of the 3 usual phases of matter.
The temperature at which all three phases of a substance can exist in equilibrium. This temperature occurs at only one pressure.
Sublimation is the process of a solid to gas without being turned into a liquid. One must find a phase diagram of the substance. The triple point where all three phases can mannerly exist. So when one finds point below this, and a pressure and temperature where liquid doesn't exist the solid will become gas.
I'm assuming you are asking about a single substance existing in all three phases of matter. The conditions under which a single substance can exist at equilibrium in all three phases (solid, liquid, and vapor or gas) is called the triple point. The triple point for water occurs at exactly 273.16 K (0.01 °C) and a vapor pressure of 611.73 pascals (ca. 6.1173 millibars, 0.0060373 atm). Sure, ice, liquid water, and water vapor can simultaneously exist in nature (for instance, in a lake which is half frozen), but those phases are not in equilibrium with each other. Either the ice is melting, the water is freezing, the vapor is condensing, etc.
This point is call the "triple point" and this is where all three lines meet together on the phase diagram.