Rain, hail and snow are all forms of precipitation.
Example of solid changing toliquid:when you take an ice and put it to thaw out it changes to water (liquid) and is the same for liquid to solid; you freeze water(liquid) and it turns to ice (solid)
The substance is water. Strictly speaking though, water doesn't exist anywhere on earth in a pure water form in any of the three states. As a gas and as a liquid, all the water on earth is a light carbonic acid, as it contains considerable amounts of carbon, and other chemicals, earth water has a ph of 7. all water vapour on earth is carbonic acid, or another acid or alcaline mix. Sulphur can also be found in solid, liquid, and gas form. So it seems the question is a trick! liquid sulphur drips and flows all over volcanoes... many chemicals occupy the three states in varying degrees of purity.
liquid to solid
Oobleck is a non-newtonian liquid.
gas -> liquid = condensation liquid -> solid = solidification (freezing) solid -> gas = sublimation gas -> solid = deposition solid -> liquid = melting liquid -> solid = vaporization
The term that means all the liquid and solid water on Earth is "hydrosphere."
The three states or forms of water found on Earth are solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor).
Water.
Water can exist as a solid, liquid, and gas on Earth due to its varying temperatures and atmospheric conditions.
Liquid, solid, and gas.
Water can be found on Earth in three states of matter: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (steam).
The four forms of water that can return to Earth from the atmosphere are rain (liquid form), snow (solid form), sleet (a mixture of rain and snow), and hail (ice pellets).
Water is the only substance that commonly exists as a solid, liquid, and gas in Earth's atmosphere. Solid water is ice, liquid water is water, and gaseous water is water vapor.
On Earth.
The term for liquid or solid water that falls from clouds to the earth's surface is precipitation. This includes rain, snow, sleet, and hail.
Water can exist in three phases on Earth: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor). These phases depend on temperature and pressure conditions.
When water changes state from a solid to a liquid, it melts. This process occurs when the temperature of the solid water (ice) increases and reaches its melting point, where the bonds between water molecules weaken and the solid structure breaks down, turning it into liquid water.