If you mean directly, it is by a process called sublimation where a gas turns right into a solid.
If you mean in stages, first the gas cools down and the particles move slower and come closer together. The gas then turns into a liquid. This process is called condensation. Then, the liquid cools down and freezes. It then turns into a solid. This process is called solidification. Sorry for deleting the previous answer. "Through the water cycle" is not specific enough and could be wrong if you were asking how sublimation works and not how a gas turns into a solid in stages.
At -63.5 degrees C chloroform becomes a solid and at 61.2 degrees C it becomes a gas. Therefore, at 80 degrees C, chloroform is a gas.
What is iron at 2000 degrees a solid liquid or gas?
Helium is a gas at room temperature and pressure. It only becomes a solid at very low temperatures close to absolute zero.
When a solid is heated the particles vibrate more and they break free of the mold they are in. This makes the solid a liquid. if you continue to heat it, the vibrations will get stronger and the particles will start to evaporate. When the particles evaporate, then it would be a gas.
The movement of the molecules making up the solid increases.
When a substance changes from a solid to a gas, called sublimation, it quickly becomes less dense.
The point at which a liquid becomes a gas is the boiling point. The point at which a gas becomes a liquid is still called the boiling point. A solid going straight to gas without passing through a liquid state is called sublimation. Dry Ice solid CO2 is a substance that that sublimes.
it becomes a solid
it becomes a heat out
Heat the solid until it becomes a liquid or a gas.
it is a gas but when it condenses it becomes a liquid
it is a gas but when it condenses it becomes a liquid
it is a gas but when it condenses it becomes a liquid
Carbon dioxide is a gas that can be changed to a solid. When turned to a solid carbon dioxide becomes dry ice.
it becomes a solid
It becomes water.
This phenomenon is called deposition.