It will get hotter, convert to a gas, or both.
When you heat a liquid, it turns into a gas through a process called evaporation or vaporization. The heat increases the kinetic energy of the liquid particles, causing them to break free from their liquid form and become a gas.
As you heat a liquid, its viscosity typically decreases. This is because the heat causes the molecules in the liquid to move more quickly and flow more easily past each other. This reduced resistance to flow leads to a lower viscosity.
Yes, it is possible to add heat to something without changing its temperature. This can happen during a phase change, such as when melting a solid into a liquid or evaporating a liquid into a gas, where the added heat provides the energy needed for the molecules to change their arrangement without a change in temperature.
During condensation, heat energy is released as water vapor changes to liquid water. This is known as the latent heat of condensation.
When heat is supplied to a liquid, its temperature increases, causing the molecules to move faster and resulting in a phase change from solid to liquid (melting) or from liquid to gas (boiling). The added heat energy disrupts the intermolecular forces holding the liquid together, allowing the molecules to overcome these forces and change state.
When you add heat to liquid water it gets warm. If it gets warm enough it will boil and evaporate.
The liquid may boil and become a gas.
When heat is added to a beaker of liquid acetone, the acetone molecules gain energy and begin to evaporate into the air as a gas. The increased temperature causes the molecules to move faster and escape the liquid phase.
If you add enough heat to any liquid it will eventually boil and convert to a gas.
When this happens,the liquid loses all its heat & becomes solid.
microwave it
it bubbled, evaporates,
It melts and turns into liquid
Nothing.
When you heat a liquid, it normally raises the rate of evaporation. The liquid, thus, becomes it's gas form.
You add heat :)
latent heat of fusion.