It depends on how much heat and what liquid it is. If it loses just a few degrees on heat it just becomes colder. If it loses alot of heat then it becomes a solid
It heats up.
They speed up and moves faster and faster.
Liquid heats up faster than ice because ice has to first melt into liquid water before it can start to warm up. Heating up ice from its solid state requires extra energy to break the intermolecular bonds holding its structure together.
When thermal energy is added to a liquid, the average kinetic energy of the liquid molecules increases, causing them to move faster and further apart. This results in an increase in the liquid's temperature, leading to its phase transition into a gas if the added energy is sufficient to overcome the intermolecular forces holding the liquid together.
The surface of the moon heats up.
it heats up
it heats up
it heats up
It heats up and precipitates out solids.
The gelatin structure will break and you will have a liquid mess.
Evaporation is when a liquid turns into a gas, like water drying up on the ground and disappearing into the air. It happens when the sun heats up the liquid and causes it to change into tiny, invisible particles that float away.
What do you think happens when some air heats up and other air is cool?
It heats up
When a liquid heats up to a certain point it turns into water vapor (which is the porcess of evaporation).
It heats up.
The density decreases.
They speed up and moves faster and faster.