Solid (ice)
Liquid (as you know it: fluid water)
Gas (vapour; you can't see or smell it,
but condenses when blowing breath against a cold window glass)
In mixtures of salt and water, typically two phases are observed: a solid phase of salt crystals and a liquid phase of water.
It's water because it's first a liquid then you can change it into ice which is solid then you can melt it which becomes a liquid . After you can put the liquid in a boiler. When it gets hot the steam comes out which is normally gives off gas
evaporation condensation precipitation there is a process that skips a step in this cycle, called SUBLIMATION, where ice turns directly into vapor, skipping the liquid stage. THere are also 3 "states" of matter: vapor, or gaseous (for water, above 100 degrees C) Liquid (for water, between 0 and 100 degrees C) Solid (for water, frozen)
Pacific Ocean is a body of water on the Earth.Of course an ocean water is a mixture; and because are 3 phases is a heterogeneous mixture.
The triple point of a phase diagram is the location where the solid, liquid, and gas phases meet; it is the temperature and pressure at which a given substance can assume any of the 3 usual phases of matter.
Water
The three phases of matter are solid, liquid, and gas. An example of each would be ice (solid), water (liquid), and steam (gas).
Water has 3 phases. These phases include steam, liquid and ice. Ice is the most dense, followed by liquid and then steam.
These phases are liquid, solid, gas.
Water or H2O can be found in three states: a liquid (can be drunk), solid (ice for your drink) or a gas (humidity comes to mind).
The three phases are solid (ice), liquid and gas.
In mixtures of salt and water, typically two phases are observed: a solid phase of salt crystals and a liquid phase of water.
At the triple point, all three phases of water coexist in equilibrium: solid (ice), liquid, and gas (water vapor). This is the point where the three phases can exist simultaneously under specific conditions of temperature and pressure.
the 3 states of water are solid, liquid and gas
A good example is water (H2O), where this one component can have 3 phases steam, water and ice.
It's water because it's first a liquid then you can change it into ice which is solid then you can melt it which becomes a liquid . After you can put the liquid in a boiler. When it gets hot the steam comes out which is normally gives off gas
Ice, water and steam