The energy required to change a substance from liquid to gas is called "enthalpy of vaporization" or "latent heat of vaporization." This energy is necessary to overcome the intermolecular forces holding the liquid molecules together, allowing them to enter the gaseous state. The enthalpy of vaporization varies between different substances and is a crucial factor in processes like boiling and evaporation.
this question is dumb
The energy required to go from liquid to gas is known as the heat of vaporization. It represents the amount of energy needed to convert one unit of a substance from liquid to gas at its boiling point. The heat of vaporization varies for different substances and is typically expressed in units of joules or calories per gram.
The specific heat of water is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of water by 1 degree Celsius. The heat of vaporization is the energy required to change water from a liquid to a gas (steam) at its boiling point. The heat of fusion is the energy required to change water from a solid to a liquid (melt snow) at its melting point.
The energy needed to change a substance from a liquid to a gas is called the enthalpy (or heat) of vaporization.
The energy required to convert a ground-state atom in the gas phase to a gaseous positive ion is known as the ionization energy. This process involves removing an electron from the atom. The ionization energy is a measure of how tightly the electron is held by the nucleus of the atom.
condensation
The energy needed to go from a liquid to a gas is referred to as heat of vaporization.
condensation
The latent heat of vaporization
The process of a liquid changing to a gas is called vaporization.
the temperature
liqiud solid and gas
Solid
Magnesium is a solid
The process of water changing from a liquid to a gas?
When a gas turns into a liquid this is known as condensation.
solid,liqiud,gas