It can lose or gain energy or it forms the attractions between particles.
It depends on what phase change they are undergoing. If it were going from a solid to a liquid, then the kinetic energy would be greater. Same as if it were going from a liquid to a gas. However, if it were going from a liquid to a solid (or a gas to a liquid), then the kinetic energy would decrease.
The effect of temperature change to the amount of heat content of the substance is called heat transfer. As heat increases, the temperature decreases.
It's called sublimation. Its undergoing a phase change. -APEX:)
The answer is that the temperature a substance freezes is also its melting point. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius into ice and if you heat ice up to 0 degrees Celsius it MELTS to give you water. Evaporation is the change from liquid to gas and condensation is the change from gas to liquid (for water this happens at 100 degrees Celsius).
Thermal expansion is the tendency of matter to change in volume in response to change in temperature. During thermal expansion, the density of a substance decreases as its volume increases. Volume is the space occupied by a body. So, when a substance expands on heating, it will occupy more space or will have more volume. But its mass does not change because the amount of matter contained in a body cannot change. Therefore, mass divided by increased volume gives a decreased density.
change is complete
break intermolecular bonds and change the phase of the substance rather than increase the kinetic energy of the particles (temperature).
The temperature of a substance can remain the same while absorbing energy if it is undergoing a phase change, such as melting or boiling. During a phase change, the absorbed energy is used to break intermolecular bonds rather than increase the kinetic energy of the particles, which keeps the temperature constant.
It is undergoing a physical change from wood to ash.
During a change of state, such as melting or boiling, the temperature of the substance remains constant because the heat energy is being used to break intermolecular forces rather than increase the kinetic energy of the particles. Once the change of state is complete, the temperature will start to rise again as thermal energy is being used to increase kinetic energy.
That will not happen unless matter is undergoing a phase change and the temperature you are measuring is that of the matter undergoing the phase change.
During a phase change, the kinetic energy of particles remains constant. This energy is used to break or form intermolecular bonds, causing the substance to change from one phase to another without a change in temperature.
The temperature of a substance can remain the same during absorbing thermal energy if the substance is undergoing a phase change, such as melting or boiling. During a phase change, the absorbed thermal energy goes into breaking intermolecular bonds rather than increasing the temperature. Once the phase change is complete, the temperature will resume rising as the substance absorbs more thermal energy.
It depends on what phase change they are undergoing. If it were going from a solid to a liquid, then the kinetic energy would be greater. Same as if it were going from a liquid to a gas. However, if it were going from a liquid to a solid (or a gas to a liquid), then the kinetic energy would decrease.
The temperature remain constant during a change of phase.
The Mass of a substance will not change with a reduction of temperature … even to -273C.
During a change of state, the temperature of a substance remains constant. This is because the energy being added or removed is used to break or form intermolecular bonds rather than increase or decrease the substance's kinetic energy.