Increasing the temperature up to the melting point.
if you were to constantly increase the temperature of a solid you would eventually reach the melting point for that particular substance, at which time the solid would melt to a liquid. if you were to keep heating the substance, at some point the liquid would reach its boiling point and would evaporate to a gas.
Putting a substance under pressure increases its melting point because substances expand as they melt. Putting them under pressure makes it harder for them to expand, which means that they require more energy (heat) in order to transition from a solid state to a liquid state. If a substance is under pressure, decreasing the pressure will lower its melting point.
The lower the amount of substance, the faster it reaches the boiling point. The more the amount of substance, the longer it takes to reach the boiling point. Hope that this is what you wanted to know! :)
When any object is melting, this indicate that the object is getting richer on energy. More energy mean more movement in particles on an atomic level. In other words, the movement increases.
A solid becomes a liquid when it temperature has reached its Melting Point (also called it Point of Fusion.)
The freezing point and melting point of a substance are the same temperature, known as the equilibrium melting point, at which the solid and liquid phases coexist in equilibrium. When a substance is cooling down, it will reach its freezing point temperature, causing it to solidify. Conversely, when a substance is heating up, it will reach its melting point temperature, causing it to liquefy.
Each substance has a specific melting point (excepting cases of sublimation or thermal degradation).
if you were to constantly increase the temperature of a solid you would eventually reach the melting point for that particular substance, at which time the solid would melt to a liquid. if you were to keep heating the substance, at some point the liquid would reach its boiling point and would evaporate to a gas.
the solid must reach its melting point which varies with every substance
melting point. :)
melting
Heating curves (temp vs time) show the transition of a solid to a liquid to a gas. The solid begins to absorb heat, which is represented by a gradual increase in your curve starting from the origin. Eventually, the solid will reach the melting point, at which the temperature will cease to increase until it has fully transitioned to a liquid phase. Therefore, the melting point is the y-value correspondind to the first horizontal portion of the heating curve.
The maximum temperature possible for a substance under extreme conditions is determined by its melting point or boiling point, which can vary depending on the specific substance. In general, temperatures can reach thousands of degrees Celsius under extreme conditions.
Putting a substance under pressure increases its melting point because substances expand as they melt. Putting them under pressure makes it harder for them to expand, which means that they require more energy (heat) in order to transition from a solid state to a liquid state. If a substance is under pressure, decreasing the pressure will lower its melting point.
you must reach its melting point or freezing point or boiling point.
The lower the amount of substance, the faster it reaches the boiling point. The more the amount of substance, the longer it takes to reach the boiling point. Hope that this is what you wanted to know! :)
When energy is added to a solid, it can reach its melting point where it transitions from a solid to a liquid.