Well if its an ice cube its eventually going to melt if it were any other solid than idk (i don't know for those of you who don't know idk means) it reall y depends on what to solid is.
Energy because energy can be used as heat.
It get hotter and if it is frozen it melts. If it is melted it boils.
Nonmetals in the solid state tend to be brittle and poor conductors of heat.
Matter will only change from a liquid to a solid when you take away heat.If a liquid turns into a solid when you ADD heat, then something else is happening. It could be a chemical reaction or a more simple example would be if you heat a mixture of something that has water in it and the water evaporates. What is left behind is whatever did not evaporate and could be a solid. This is technically not the same matter that you had before, so you can't say the matter turned into a solid from a liquid by adding heat.
When a substance changes from a liquid to a solid it releases energy. (You take the heat out)
Nothing? If you do nothing to it, nothing will happen to it.
If a solid is subjected to heat, it will expand. On reaching its melting point, the solid will become liquid. At boiling point it will convert in to gaseous form. These are the three states of a matter.
Add heat.
When you add kinetic energy to a solid the molecules won't move
Nothing does.
When this happens,the liquid loses all its heat & becomes solid.
It depends on the solid. Stone would probably become molten lava. Metals would become liquid and could by poured into moulds. Solid ice would turn into water.
Well if its an ice cube its eventually going to melt if it were any other solid than idk (i don't know for those of you who don't know idk means) it reall y depends on what to solid is.
latent heat of fusion.
You add heat :)
and add it to water
Well if its an ice cube its eventually going to melt if it were any other solid than idk (i don't know for those of you who don't know idk means) it reall y depends on what to solid is.