How do the three states of matter change?
1 Answer
Jul 31, 2017
Matter changes phases via the addition or removal of heat.
- process:
solid→+heat⇒liquid→+heat⇒gas
and vice versa
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Explanation:
Matter changes phases (states) by either addition or removal of heat. For example, adding heat to ice causes it to melt. This creates water, a liquid. If you add even more heat, then the water will evaporate and become vapor, a gas.
Conversely, if you remove heat from gas, it will reverse back to a liquid (i.e. rainfall occurs in low temperatures); removing more will cause the liquid to freeze into a solid (i.e. ice on a winter day).
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There are cases where a substance will skip the liquid phase and transition directly to gas when heat is added; this is called sublimation. Reversing the process is called deposition/desublimation.