It will get hot. When sufficiently hot it will start glowing orange-red and start melting.
Rubber and glass which become softer as they are heated are examples of crystalline solids
No. Heating and cooling do not change the mass of an object. Changes in temperature very often change the volume of an object, however, which means that the density of the object changes. Heating usually causes an object to expand, which means that its density goes down. Its mass, and therefore its weight, does not change.
Plastic - injection mold. Metal, sheet metal presses, wood - hand carved. Glass - tubes as heated and altered in a glass blowing method.
Since glass is a poor conductor of heat, it may crack on uneven heating. Therefore, in order to heat it evenly, you have to rotate the glass tubing.
This happens when you smash an old-fashioned mercury thermometre! The mercury spills out of the glass as it is a liquid and it also breaks up into spherical droplets at the edges, that will roll around on a hard floor and look just like ball-bearings. It does not appear to react with the floor or furniture.
it will shatter
it gets hotwhat kind of ball are you asking about?
The iron ball will expands and the iron ball will be hot .
Yes, because if glass is heated it breaks, if glass is not heated it doesn't break.
When glass is heated, it does not have a distinct smell.
No, glass does not shrink when heated. In fact, glass expands when heated due to increased molecular movement. If glass is subsequently cooled down rapidly, it can crack or shatter due to thermal stress.
The heat softens the ball and, unless the ball is cracked, the pressure increase from the air inside the ball being heated causes a small dent to pop out.
The lens of the magnifying glass concentrates the sun's light to a point. At that point the paper is heated to its ignition temperature and it can catch fire
When a table tennis ball is heated, its air pressure increases causing it to expand and become softer. This could affect the ball's bounce and flight characteristics, making it slower and less consistent during play. Heating the ball too much can also potentially damage it permanently.
when the ball is heated, it will pass through the unheated ring.
no, sand is heated to make glass :) youtwat.^.^
A glass ball. Glass is a material that does not have elasticity like rubber, so when a glass ball is dropped, it will not bounce.