Molecules only vibrate in solids. so in solids, they vibrate most when they are expreinecing the latent heat of meltng, or when they are just about to melt.
Yes, as all molecules do when the temperature is raised, they vibrate more violently.
When a molecule freezes, the kinetic energy of that molecule decreases, and the molecules do not move as fast. It is chemically unaltered, but on the phase has changed, making it a physical change.
vibrations make air molecules move
Yes. The molecule vibrate about its equilibrium position. If the thermal energy is high enough the molecule can break free from intermolecular bonds leading to changes i physical phase (solid-->liquid-->gas)
No, the gas phase is not the most ordered phase. In the gas phase, molecules have high kinetic energy and are not held together in a fixed arrangement, leading to a high degree of disorder and randomness. The solid phase is typically the most ordered phase, with particles arranged in a specific and fixed lattice structure.
Yes, as all molecules do when the temperature is raised, they vibrate more violently.
In some comic book storylines, The Flash can vibrate his molecules at high speed to phase through solid objects. This ability allows him to pass through walls and other barriers.
Yes, air molecules can vibrate. When the molecules absorb energy, they begin to move and vibrate, creating sound waves. This vibration is what allows us to hear sounds in the environment.
When heat is applied to a solid, it increases the kinetic energy of the molecules, causing them to vibrate faster and move farther apart. This disrupts the ordered arrangement of the molecules in a solid, eventually leading to a phase change into a liquid.
The phase with the most energy is the gas phase. Gas molecules have higher kinetic energy compared to solid or liquid molecules because they have more freedom to move and collide with each other at higher speeds.
Objects that vibrate cause air molecules to also vibrate, creating sound waves that propagate through the air. The vibrations push and pull air molecules as they travel, which our ears can detect as sound.
And farther apart, and it changes phase: ice to water, water to gas,
Atoms or molecules when they are heated.
Plasma, then gases.
All forms except a Bose-Einstein condensate, which only occurs at absolute zero.
The phase of matter where molecules are most closely attracted to each other is the solid phase. In solids, molecules are tightly packed and held together by strong intermolecular forces, which restrict their movement and keep them in a fixed position.
Heat!