If you leave water alone, it is in liquid form. If you raise the temperature of water to boiling, it creates steam. Is this a gas? If you lower the temperature to freezing, it becomes a solid.
Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius (32 F) and starts to starts to boil at 100 degrees Celsius (about 212 F)
While the water is boiling (changing from liquid to gas), no temperature change takes place. The energy absorbed during this process all goes to the change in state.
Gallium is a liquid, a solid, and a gas, but it changes states to became a liqiud solid, or gas. Gallium can exist in all states of matter.
Water can be in the three basic states of matter. Solid (Ice) Liquid (Water as a liguid) and Gas (Steam). Liquid water changes to a solid (Ice) by the temperature decreasing and Liquid water changes to a gas (steam) by the remperature being increased.
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
Water vapor needs to condense by cooling it.
Sounds like bromine. (It actually is.) Bromine is also volatile. A link is provided below.Yes that is correct but say if this quest was in an exam, you wouldn't write that.The answer is Bromine because the question clearly states, at room temperature this halogen is a liquid,and on any periodic table, bromine is a different colour to the other elements showing that it is a liquid or it melts close to room temperature. Bromine, Mercury, Gallium, Ceasium and Francium are all the same colour as each other. Also, yes. Bromine is volatile.Hope this helps! :)
false
solid to liquid--> melting liquid to gas---> evapourating
Temperature causes the matter to exist in three different states. They are Solid, Liqid and Gas. If temperature is increased matter changes into gas and if temperature is decreased it changes into solid.
Gallium is a liquid, a solid, and a gas, but it changes states to became a liqiud solid, or gas. Gallium can exist in all states of matter.
Water can be in the three basic states of matter. Solid (Ice) Liquid (Water as a liguid) and Gas (Steam). Liquid water changes to a solid (Ice) by the temperature decreasing and Liquid water changes to a gas (steam) by the remperature being increased.
All substances have a melting point.Water, for example, has a melting point. It is simply the temperature at which a substance changes states to a liquid.
When matter is acted upon by force or temperature, it can move between all the states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas.
These changes of state are: solid to liquid, liquid to gas, gas to liquid, liquid to solid, solid to gas, gas to solid. The majority of substances have these state of matter changes.
The following will change state from solid to liquid.
The major cause of changes in states of matter is the change in temperature.As the temperature decreases to certain limit, a gas will condenses into a liquid and a liquid will freeze into a solid. It also works the other way around. And so, when temperature increases to certain limit, a solid will melt into a liquid, and a liquid will evaporate into a gas. However, there are special cases where a solid can turn into a gas (skipping the liquid phase) through a process called sublimation.The temperatures at which these phase changes happen depend on the substances since different substances have different chemical make ups and bonding structures.
Bromine is a liquid at room temperature
There are actually three changes of state that release energy. Liquid to solid, gas to liquid, gas to solid.