That depends upon temperature and pressure.
At room temperature and sea level pressures, most waxes are solid
or if you melt it it turns in to a liquid but if you put it at 100 degrees it turns in to gas.
Ice (solid water) changes to liquid water when heated. Wax solid changes to liquid wax when heated. Metal becomes molten when heated to its melting point. Paraffin wax solid changes to liquid paraffin wax when heated.
Solid in solid: metal alloys. Liquid in liquid: vinegar dissolving in water. Gas in gas: air. Solid in liquid: salt dissolving in water. Liquid in solid: mercury absorbed by gold. Gas in liquid: carbon dioxide dissolving in soda. Solid in gas: smoke particles in air. Liquid in gas: water vapor in air. Gas in solid: hydrogen absorbed by palladium.
a feather is a solid
* solid to liquid: melting* liquid to solid: freezing* liquid to gas: vaporization* gas to liquid: liquefaction* solid to gas: sublimation* gas to solid: deposition
A solid.
Solid.
Hot candle wax is a liquid. When the wax is heated, it melts and transforms into a liquid form.
wax as a solid is not flammable it will melt but not catch fire.wax as a liquid will only melt.so. no^^ no. your wrong. lolwax as a solid does turn to liquid, and in a candle, for example, the wick is burning the vapour from the liquid wax which is actually very flammable.
that's a good question. It is a amorphous solid because it expands or gradually loses shape.
Solid, Liquid, and Gas. Solid is the actual candle, liquid is the wax, and anytime u have a liquid you also have a small amount of evaportion depending on the temp.
gas soild lique
Solid
The wax on a candle transitions from solid to liquid as it melts from the heat of the flame. As the liquid wax drips down the side, it cools and solidifies back into a solid state. So, the changes of state that occur are melting (solid to liquid) and solidification (liquid to solid).
The change of state in a lit candle is from solid (wax) to liquid (molten wax) to gas (vaporized wax) as the heat from the flame melts the wax and turns it into vapor that burns, releasing heat and light.
Ice (solid water) changes to liquid water when heated. Wax solid changes to liquid wax when heated. Metal becomes molten when heated to its melting point. Paraffin wax solid changes to liquid paraffin wax when heated.
Candle wax is a solid at room temperature. When heated, it melts into a liquid form.
When candle wax changes from a solid to a liquid, the heat from the flame melts the wax. The heat breaks the solid wax molecules apart, turning them into a liquid that can flow. Once the liquid wax cools down again, it solidifies, forming a new layer of solid wax.