I'm pretty sure that it means that a liquid turns into a solid.
The term "melting point" is used to describe the temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid. The term "freezing point" is used to describe the temperature at which a substance changes from a liquid to a solid.
They are the same thing. Most commonly the term melting point is used to describe the temperature at which a substance first co-exists in both a liquid and solid state. Freezing point is used usually to describe a substance that is usually liquid at room temperature, such as water. Conversely the term 'boiling point' refers to the first temperature at which the substance exists in both liquid and gaseous states.
Room temperature melting point refers to the temperature at which a solid substance transitions to a liquid at standard room temperature, typically around 20-25°C (68-77°F). This term is often used to describe materials that can exist as solids at cooler temperatures but will melt into a liquid state at or just above room temperature. For example, substances like butter and certain waxes have melting points that fall within this range, making them pliable or liquid at room temperature.
No, a kernel would not explode at room temperature if broken open. The term "explode" typically refers to a sudden release of energy or material, which is not a characteristic of a kernel breaking open at room temperature.
Tea will generally melt faster than water at room temperature due to the additional substances present in tea, such as dissolved solids, which lower its freezing point. Additionally, the temperature of the room may not fall low enough for either water or tea to actually freeze, so melting may not be the correct term to use in this context.
The term "melting point" is used to describe the temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid. The term "freezing point" is used to describe the temperature at which a substance changes from a liquid to a solid.
They are the same thing. Most commonly the term melting point is used to describe the temperature at which a substance first co-exists in both a liquid and solid state. Freezing point is used usually to describe a substance that is usually liquid at room temperature, such as water. Conversely the term 'boiling point' refers to the first temperature at which the substance exists in both liquid and gaseous states.
Freezing rain Sleet
The freezing point of fresh water under normal conditions.
Room temperature melting point refers to the temperature at which a solid substance transitions to a liquid at standard room temperature, typically around 20-25°C (68-77°F). This term is often used to describe materials that can exist as solids at cooler temperatures but will melt into a liquid state at or just above room temperature. For example, substances like butter and certain waxes have melting points that fall within this range, making them pliable or liquid at room temperature.
It means boiling points are hot and freezing points are cold.
The usual term is "sleet".
ambot - this is a Philippine word for I do not know, so do not waste out time with unsuitable answers. Solidification changes subjects from liquids to gasses to solids what ever the temperature. Freezing is generally accepted to mean a widespread of occurrence of temperature below 0oC persisting for several days and then the temperature returns to normal
Boiling point
Warm Blooded
The term used to describe the gradual increase of the average air temperature in the Earth's lower atmosphere is "global warming."
Air temperature and wind speed