Evaporation is an endothermic process.
Fission is an exothermic process.
A liquid on its own cannot be described as either endothermic or exothermic. The terms endothermic and exothermic are the names of two opposite process reactions. An endothermic reaction absorbs heat and and exothermic reaction gives off heat. A liquid can be involved in either an endothermic reaction or in an exothermic reaction. If you are evaporating a liquid from its liquid phase to its gas phase, then the reaction is usually endothermic and vice versa, going from the gas phase to the liquid phase, the reaction is usually exothermic.
exothermic. the energy flows out. exothermic. the energy flows out.
An endothermic reaction would not necessarily have either a high or low activation energy; it could be either and would depend on the reactants. Also, the activation energy alone does not determine if a reaction is endothermic or exothermic; a low or high activation energy could be part of an endothermic or exothermic reaction, again depending on the reactants.
An exothermic reaction is a reaction that releases energy in the form of heat or light. This type of reaction usually feels warm to the touch and may involve combustion or decomposition of reactants. Examples include burning wood, rusting iron, and neutralization reactions.
Evaporation is an endothermic process.
It will be an endothermic process because the beaker becomes cool after evaporation.
EXOTHERMIC: any combustion ENDOTHERMIC: evaporation of liquids
Evaporation is an endothermic process.Condensation is an exothermic process.
No, evaporating is not always an exothermic reaction. Evaporation is the process of a liquid turning into a gas, and whether it is exothermic or endothermic depends on the specific conditions such as temperature and pressure.
Freezing is exothermic, as the substance that is freezing loses energy to its surroundings.
Exothermic/endothermic is a process not a feeling.
Always endothermic. Liquids absorb heat from the surroundings through evaporation, and keeps continuing this to regain lost energy. This produces a cooling effect in the surroundings.
It is an endothermic process.
Water evaporation is an endothermic process.
endothermic
Dissociation is an endothermic process.