When a substance condenses, it turns from a vapor (gas) into a liquid. When this occurs, the atoms/molecules lose some kinetic energy, and don't move as fast. They also become packed closer together, and take up less volume.
When heat is added to a substance, the molecules and atoms vibrate faster.
1 mole of anything always contains 6.022*1022 things; therefore, 1 mole contains 6.022*1022 atoms.
Yes Temperature does effect the movement of molecules and atoms. This is because the warmer the temperature is the easier the molecules and atoms can move, while on the contrary, the colder the temperature is the more difficult it is for the molecules and atoms move around
All of them. Molecules are made of atoms, not pieces of atoms.
Whatever be the substance the one gram mole of that substance would have 6.023 x 1023 atoms or molecules or ions in it. Hence to get the mole just divide the number given by 6.023 x 1023
Atoms existed before molecules do. Without atoms, molecules could not happen.
Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance, such as atoms and molecules. While temperature does not have atoms and molecules itself, it characterizes the motion of these particles as they interact with their environment.
the building blocks of substances are called what atoms or molecules?
When heat is added to a substance, the molecules and atoms vibrate faster.
atoms have one substance, when molecules have many. They bioth have ele torn
the atoms and molecules will vibrate, causing the substance to heat up (friction causes heat, the molecules and atoms will rub together, causing friction). I hope this helped!!!!!n_n when a substance reaches its boiling point naturally the intermolecular force becomes weak and the substance gets converted from one form to another..
Every substance, except for atoms and subatomic particles, has molecules.
Yes. Molecules are the combination of atoms. Therefor every substance contains molecules.
The vibrating atoms/molecules in the hot sustance make the atoms/molecules in the cooler substance vibrate and this vibration gradually spreads along the substance.
the atoms will begin to giggle around more as they gain thermal energy.
The motion of atoms or molecules in a substance is related to its temperature, with higher temperatures leading to increased motion. This motion affects the state of matter (solid, liquid, gas) that the substance is in, as well as its properties such as density and viscosity. In gases, the motion of atoms or molecules creates pressure.
diatomic molecule