freezing
melting
The latent heat of fusion
Not always. Some go straight from solid to gas eg dry ice ... called 'sublimation'.
Yes, a liquid can go straight to a solid through a process called freezing or solidification. This occurs when the temperature of the liquid drops below its freezing point, causing the molecules to lose energy and arrange themselves into a solid structure. Additionally, a process known as "deposition" can occur, where a gas transforms directly into a solid without passing through the liquid phase, but this does not apply to liquids.
it doesnt go anywhere. The solid breaks up in really small pieces, and mixes with the liquid.
When you turn a solid into a liquid you melt or liquefythe solid. Usually, this process requires heat to make the substance's molecules force each other far enough away that they can no longer maintain their form, and become a liquid.
The latent heat of fusion
gas to liquid = condensation liquid to solid = freezing the gas must go through a liquid state, Even if for a millisecond.
sublimation
The latent heat of fusion
The latent heat of fusion
Not always. Some go straight from solid to gas eg dry ice ... called 'sublimation'.
Both! The physical state of a substance can go straight from gas to solid, or can heat from solid to liquid and then to gas. The process a solid undertakes when it goes straight to its gas state from a solid state without first turning liquid is called sublimation.
Yes, it is possible to go from a solid to a gas through a process called sublimation. Sublimation occurs when a solid turns directly into a gas without passing through the liquid state.
Yes, a liquid can go straight to a solid through a process called freezing or solidification. This occurs when the temperature of the liquid drops below its freezing point, causing the molecules to lose energy and arrange themselves into a solid structure. Additionally, a process known as "deposition" can occur, where a gas transforms directly into a solid without passing through the liquid phase, but this does not apply to liquids.
it doesnt go anywhere. The solid breaks up in really small pieces, and mixes with the liquid.
Usually, but it can also pass the liquid phase and go straight to vapor. That is called "sublimation".
When we melt a solid, it will become a liquid. This is a physical change (as opposed to a chemical one), and meltingis something we observe when ice changes to liquid water.When a solid turns into a liquid form it is called melting.