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The best answer I can give to that is: eventually.
If water is continually heated, it will eventually become a vapor/gas/steam, but if you have cold water and heat it up a bit, it will not become a gas. It takes a large amount of energy to convert water to steam.
Regular ice is frozen, solid water. When s temperature rises, it turns to water: a liquid. Dry is solid carbon dioxide. When its temperature rises, it becomes a gas instead of first turning to a liquid.
It is increasing in temperature. When you put a pot of water over a lit stove, it evaporates into its gas form, water vapor, which can also be called steam.
Warm air expands and cools as it rises; the temperature decreases below dew point, so the water vapour changes phase from gas to liquid
The temperature at which water transitions from a gas to a liquid is 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit) at standard atmospheric pressure. This process is known as condensation. As water vapor cools and reaches this temperature, it changes back into liquid water. However, the exact temperature can vary with changes in pressure.
solid (ice), liquid (liquid water), gas (steam).
Water changes from a liquid to a gas in a process known as evaporation. (Think about a boiling pot of water on a stove).As the temperature rises, the water becomes water vapor, a gas.
it is because of of room temperature Every substance has a particular temperature it has to be before it changes from one state of matter (gas, solid, and liquid) to another. For example, water changes from ice(solid) to liquid water when it's temperature rises above 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees F), and it changes from a liquid to water vapor (gas) when it rises above 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees F). The temperature different liquids require to change to either solid or gas depends on the particular liquid's freezing/boiling point.
at 100 Degrees C
boiling point
The temperature it mst be when it changes from a liquid to a gas (water -> steam)
The tiny bubbles in the cold tap water are likely due to the release of dissolved gases, such as oxygen or carbon dioxide, as the water warms up to room temperature. Gases are more soluble in colder liquids than in warmer ones, so when the water temperature changes, the gases come out of solution and form bubbles.
Regular ice is frozen, solid water. When s temperature rises, it turns to water: a liquid. Dry is solid carbon dioxide. When its temperature rises, it becomes a gas instead of first turning to a liquid.
Water is a substance that changes from a gas (water vapor) to a liquid (water) through a process called condensation. This change in state occurs when the temperature of the water vapor decreases, causing it to lose energy and form liquid water droplets.
It is increasing in temperature. When you put a pot of water over a lit stove, it evaporates into its gas form, water vapor, which can also be called steam.
Everything. Assuming the pressure and temperature is right
Water because It is first solid its ice then when it melts it is liquid and when it is a gas its water vapor.
Warm air expands and cools as it rises; the temperature decreases below dew point, so the water vapour changes phase from gas to liquid