Heated liquid rises because it reaches the boiling point.
Nichrome
Boiling is when a liquid starts ti make the change from a liquid to a gas, and evaporation is when a a liquid is somewhat "drying up" and becoming a gas, so they are both a liquid becoming a gas, boiling is almost just a type of evaporation. hope that helps!
There is a Wiki aricle titled "Solar water heating", not sure if there is a better title than that. Evaporation only occurs when the surface liquid gains enough energy to vapourise. If the whole body of liquid starts vapourising instead of just the surface layer the liquid is no longer evaporating, instead it is boiling.
The vapor comes from the flavored liquid inside the e-cig. The liquid (usually made of a mix of propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin, with or without nicotine added) is heated just enough to vaporize it (convert it from liquid to gas).
Camelot is a make believe place, there is no significance to be assigned to a made up history.
I think it's liquid because heating it will make it evaporate.
By heating the intermolecular forces are weakened and liquid molecules can escape as a gas.
By heating the lead into a liquid and pouring it into a mold
A liquid can change to a gas, by heating up and evaporating into the air.
The volume of air increases on its heating hence the balloon rises on heating
The boiling point of liquid is the point at which the liquid becomes a gas. The liquid cannot exceed the boiling point, under nomal circumstances, otherwise it would instantly become a gas and cease being a liquid.
A supercooled liquid can become solid on heating.
Simple...hot air rises..
It just makes saltwater. However, you can make a supersaturated liquid by heating it, then slowly cooling it.
Cooling or Heating First of all we have 3 phases, Gas, Liquid and Solid to change from gas to liquid to solid, cooling is required and to change from solid to liquid to gas, heating is required This type of heat is called latent heat, always think of water as an example Ice --> Water , heating Water--> Water Vapour, more heating
The evaporation of the liquid by heating.
By Heating.