A solid is already 'frozen'. Many solids will liquefy when heated, so their solid forms are the result of cooling down again, though the solid/liquid change may occur at hundreds of degrees celsius. Gases will liquefy before freezing, but will freeze if cold enough. Thus nitrogen liquefies at -196 celsius and freezes at -210 celsius, hydrogen liquefies at -252 celsius and freezes at -259 celsius, and helium liquefies at -269 celsiusand freezes at -272 celsius, which is about 1 degree above absolute zero.
Nitrogen can freeze anything and i think it is a frozen gas.
Air is made up of a number of different compounds and elements that all freeze at different temperatures. Some of them never freeze. eg. nitrogen. Others like carbon dioxide will freeze at -78.5 degrees centergrade
Yes, but it would have to become very cold very fast for it to remain gas and then just freeze. This process is called sublimination. This is also the name for a straight solid-to-gas state change, through high heat (you know those evaporator guns in science fiction? Not happening on people. They'd need a sublimination gun)If it gets cold enough, gas will turn to liquid, this is called condensing, and it how precipitation is formed.
True. Freezing would compress the gas in the ball and reduce the elasticity of the rubber in it.
in the winter condensation occurs in fuel tanks and in sufficient quantity it will freze and block the lines add a little methyl hydrate or alcohol to get rid of it
Nitrogen can freeze anything and i think it is a frozen gas.
To turn a liquid into a solid you have to freeze it. To turn a gas into a solid you must first turn it into a liquid, then freeze it.
gas can't freeze
No. Because it is not a solid or gas.
No, it cant.
Yes, propane gas can freeze in extremely cold temperatures, typically below -44 degrees Fahrenheit.
No!!!! Regular Anti-Freeze is not a combustible liquid! Gasoline already has a "gas line anti-freeze" added to it in cold climates. In extremely cold areas, one small bottle of "gas line Anti-freeze" purchased at an Auto Parts store will help.
As a general rule, liquids don't freeze things. But the gas, Liquid Nitrogen, can freeze things.
Air is made up of a number of different compounds and elements that all freeze at different temperatures. Some of them never freeze. eg. nitrogen. Others like carbon dioxide will freeze at -78.5 degrees centergrade
Gasoline freezes at an extremely low temperature. Well below -97oF. If you are looking to freeze gasoline, I would mix water into it, which would allow it to freeze at a higher temperature, closer to 32oF.
yes if it is cheap gas it usally has more moisture in it (water)
Water will freeze faster than Coke because Coke has more gas than water and gas takes more time to freeze than plain liquid