melting point
The temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid is called its melting point. It is a specific temperature unique to each substance and is determined by the intermolecular forces within the substance. When the substance reaches its melting point, the solid will begin to transition into a liquid state.
A change of phase, from solid to liquid, or liquid to gas, or gas to liquid, etc., is also sometimes called a change of state.
Each liquid boils at a different temperature, but the temperature it boils at is called the Boiling Point. For example, the boiling point of water is 212 Fahrenheit.This specific temprature is dependant on the pressureon the liquid at that time, as an example at ahigher temperatures the boiling point is higher.
The solid->gas transition is called sublimation; the gas->solid transition is called deposition. The reason this happens is, essentially, "because that's how things are". It all depends on where on the phase diagram the material happens to be.
the process of water changing into liquid is called evaporation
The temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid is called the melting point.
It is called the enthalpy of fusion of a substance, also known as (latent) heat of fusion.
Its condensation temperature.
At a unique temperature, called the "freezing point", for each pure substance at a constant pressure, a solid form of the substance can change from solid to liquid phase by absorbing heat energy from its environment without raising the temperature of the substance, and, at the same temperature and pressure, a liquid phase of the same substance, can solidify without changing its temperature if it can transfer heat energy to the external environment.
freezing temperature
This temperature is called melting point and is different for each substance or material.
The boiling point. This can be found in the periodic table.
Heat transfer that does not cause a temperature change is called latent heat transfer. This occurs when heat is absorbed or released during a change in state (solid to liquid, liquid to gas) without changing the temperature of the substance.
This temperature is called freezing point and is different for each substance or material.
This temperature is called melting point and is different for each substance or material.
The answer to this question is entirely dependent on the type of substance. This temperature is called the boiling point.
The answer to this question is entirely dependent on the type of substance. This temperature is called the boiling point.