Like in a gas when a solid gets hot the particles vibrate faster and harder. In a gas when the do this they need more room so the gas expands or the pressure goes up.
In a solid the particles are constrained in their movement by the bonds making the solid. Never the less the particles vibrate harder within these constraints and need more room. The solid will therefore expand slightly to accommodate. As the temp goes up further the atoms of the solid will begin to hit one another causing their electrons to jump to higher shells. When these fall back to their proper place they emit a photon. Thus solid will begin to radiate energy.
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.
When particles are heated, they gain energy, which leads to an increase in their kinetic energy. As a result, the speed at which the particles move increases. This heightened movement can cause substances to expand and can affect their state, such as transitioning from solid to liquid or from liquid to gas. The overall effect is a more rapid and energetic motion of the particles.
When a solid is heated its particles melts and change into liquid
The particles in a solid start to move faster and faster as they are heated. Eventually they may move fast and freely enough to reach the liquid state, and if they continue to be heated, the particles could obtain enough energy to leave the liquid state and go into the gaseous state.
The particles in a solid, move very little. But when it is heated, the particles expand because the heat moves the particles around more, making them need more space to move, therefore expanding the solid. =)
The particles in a liguid are bonded (not as strongly as a solid which is why it flows.) when it is heated the particles vibrate and eventually the bonds break and the particles break away. This is evaporation.
When a solid is heated, the particles gain energy, leading to increased movement and vibration. This causes the particles to expand, leading to an increase in volume. Conversely, when a solid is cooled, the particles lose energy, resulting in decreased movement and contraction, which decreases the volume of the solid.
it expands
When a solid is heated and its temperature rises, the kinetic energy of the particles in the solid increases. This causes the particles to vibrate more vigorously and further apart, leading to expansion of the solid. Eventually, the solid may reach its melting point and transition into a liquid state.
Evaporation occurs, it becomes solid inside
When solids are heated, their particles absorb energy and vibrate more vigorously, causing the solid to expand. This increase in kinetic energy can lead to the solid eventually melting into a liquid, as the particles break free from their fixed positions.
When a solid is heated but not melted or burned, the particles within the solid start vibrating more rapidly due to the increase in temperature. This increased vibration increases the kinetic energy of the particles, causing them to move around more within their fixed positions in the solid's structure.
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 particle will vibrate more slowly around its position.
The bonds between solid particles are weakened.
Well what happens to particles in a solid is they slowly vibrate and get further and further apart until they turn into a gas. I had exactly the same question for my homework Thank youNo. your saying that if you put say a pan on a stove it will suddenly turn into a gas?? don't think so pal!The real answer is the particles in a solid vibrate faster when heated this is why metal expands when heated, to accommodate for all of the moving particlesBut if you do heat it up enough, for certain materials, the particles will separate and turn into a gas, or in some cases turn into a liquid.
When a solid is heated using the particulate theory of matter, the particles within the solid gain energy and vibrate more vigorously. This vibrational motion causes the particles to move farther apart, weakening the intermolecular forces holding them together. Eventually, the solid will reach its melting point and transition into a liquid state.