No, liquid and solid water are not products of combustion. Combustion typically involves the reaction of a fuel with oxygen to produce heat, carbon dioxide, and water vapor in the gaseous state. Liquid and solid water are the result of condensation of water vapor.
Ice, Water, and Steam.Bonus answer: Plasma!
It is a solid
from a solid into a liquid.
water might be in any form Ice(solid) Water(liquid) Vapour(gas)
Ice is considered a solid because it is the frozen form of water. It is made up of water molecules that are arranged in a specific crystal lattice structure. At room temperature, ice will melt and transform into the liquid state, water.
Water can be a product of combustion.
Water can be a product of combustion.
solution, a solid is disolved into a liquid
water is a solid then it melts now it is a liquid
When water freezes it changes from a liquid to a solid. When water boils or evaporates it changes from a liquid to a gas.
our food and water, you eat it as a solid and it comes out as a solid, mostly. when you drink water it goes in as a liquid and comes out as a liquid.
In hydrolysis reactions, water is always a product. Hydrolysis involves breaking a compound apart by adding a molecule of water.
Liquid water.
An example of a solid to a liquid is ice melting into water.
Water can be both a liquid and a solid; freeze the water for ice (solid) and melt the ice to it's original state, water (liquid) Hope this helped. not just water almost any liquid can be froze into a solid
You don't! H2O is a product of combustion, and that is just how it is! That is why in cold weather you see "fog"; same liquid, different temp.
Ice (solid) starts out as water (liquid) and when water freezes it becomes a solid.