At around 660 degrees C, aluminum liquefies. At this point, there will begin to be some aluminum molecules that escape the liquid as gas. However, when aluminum boils at 2,519 degrees C, aluminum gas is produced in some sufficient quantity.
Anything can be vaporised at high enough temeperature. Aluminum requires 2519 0C.
Above tempeartures of 2,327oC Aluminum boils and becomes a vapour. At room temperature and pressure Aluminum is a solid, at 659oC it melts into a liquid.
Yes, aluminum turns into a gas after it melts and reaches it boiling point 2518.85 C. At that point it starts evaporating (i.e. turning to gas).
Yes, it also can have a chance to change colors and sing songs.
wood floats in any fluid.
yes it can
Float
Shape the aluminum to look like a boat, so it displaces enough water to float. The force supporting the aluminum is the buoyant force. It is equal to the weight of the volume of water displaced.
Depends on what they're dropped into. Water - no. But drop them into something that's denser than aluminium and they will float.
Wood will. A solid block of aluminum will sink. Things float when their density is less than water. There are some woods that sink.
Generally speaking, a denser substance will sink in a less dense substance. Assuming standard temperatures, since aluminum has a density of about 2.7 grams per cubic centimeter and water only has 1 gram per cc, aluminum would sink. A thin aluminum foil could float by virtue of the surface tension on water (but if submerged, will sink). An aluminum boat would float because it displaces a greater mass of water than its own weight. An aluminum block could also float on a liquid of higher density than the aluminum.
No, a coin can not float on gasoline.
Float
yes it does float because it has less density. Therefore it will float.
The fats (i.e. cream) from the milk will dissolve in the gasoline and the the resulting gasoline/cream solution will float on the water from the milk.
Aluminum will sink in gasoline because its density (2.7g per cc) is greater than that of gasoline (about 0.7g per cc).
Float. Gasoline is less dense than water.
yes
Yes
Gasoline
sink
Sink
yes