No, stone does not turn to liquid when heat is applied. Instead, stone will typically undergo a phase change from solid to liquid only if it reaches its melting point, which is very high for most types of stone.
When magma and water come into contact, the heat from the magma causes the water to vaporize and turn into steam. This steam can then be used to drive turbines and generate electricity through a geothermal power plant.
When magma heats water, it turns the water into steam. The steam can then be used to drive turbines connected to generators, which ultimately produce electricity. This process is known as geothermal energy production.
Magma can solidify and cool to form igneous rocks such as granite, basalt, or andesite, depending on the composition and cooling rate of the magma.
Changing water into gas in a popcorn kernel demonstrates the expansion of water when heated, similar to how dissolved water in magma expands when heated. As the water molecules heat up and turn into gas in the kernel, they create pressure that causes the kernel to pop. Similarly, when magma containing dissolved water heats up, the water expands and creates pressure, leading to volcanic eruptions.
Magma turns water into steam.
No, stone does not turn to liquid when heat is applied. Instead, stone will typically undergo a phase change from solid to liquid only if it reaches its melting point, which is very high for most types of stone.
When magma and water come into contact, the heat from the magma causes the water to vaporize and turn into steam. This steam can then be used to drive turbines and generate electricity through a geothermal power plant.
When magma heats water, it turns the water into steam. The steam can then be used to drive turbines connected to generators, which ultimately produce electricity. This process is known as geothermal energy production.
Steam is produced. The steam pressure can be used to drive turbine or piston driven electrical generators.
yes because the molten rock is heavy so the water floats on top of it like the oil and water experiment but even so, the heat of the magma would turn the water to steam faster than you can say two.
Liquid rock (magma, lava) condenses around a per-existing thing - OR sediments turn into sedimentary stone around an object.
Magma can solidify and cool to form igneous rocks such as granite, basalt, or andesite, depending on the composition and cooling rate of the magma.
Changing water into gas in a popcorn kernel demonstrates the expansion of water when heated, similar to how dissolved water in magma expands when heated. As the water molecules heat up and turn into gas in the kernel, they create pressure that causes the kernel to pop. Similarly, when magma containing dissolved water heats up, the water expands and creates pressure, leading to volcanic eruptions.
no it can not turn to stone..
it melts.
give it the water stone.