What Determines the Changeover from Liquid to Solid or Steam in Water?

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When a cup of water is placed in a freezer, the presence of both ice and liquid indicates that the liquid has not fully reached freezing temperature, or that the transition from liquid to solid requires time, even at freezing conditions. In the case of boiling water, small bubbles forming do not necessarily indicate boiling; they may be gases escaping from the water rather than water vapor. When water is boiling vigorously, the coexistence of steam and liquid water suggests that the liquid may not have reached boiling temperature uniformly, as the transition from liquid to steam also requires time and energy. The concept of latent heat is crucial in understanding these phase changes, as it highlights the energy needed for transitions between states of matter. Additionally, the system may not have achieved thermal equilibrium, affecting the observed states of the water.
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1. When a cup of water is in a freezer, for a while, some of it's ice and some of it's liquid.

Does that mean the liquid part has not hit freezing temperature yet or does the changeover from liquid to solid take a while, even at freezing temperature?

2. When a pot of water gets hot enough, small bubbles form.

Is that considered boiling ?

3. When a pot of water is boiling vigorously, some of it is steam and some of it is water.

Does that mean the water that is still liquid has not hit boiling temperature yet or does the change over from liquid to steam take a while, even at boiling temperature?
 
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any small bubble is vapor so its probably boiled. and the transition from water to ice does take a certain amount of energy, so it is likely that the water is below freezing but hasn't solidified yet.

EDIT: when I say that it has probably boiled I am talking about the specific bubble not the whole pot.
 
neginf said:
1. When a cup of water is in a freezer, for a while, some of it's ice and some of it's liquid.

Does that mean the liquid part has not hit freezing temperature yet or does the changeover from liquid to solid take a while, even at freezing temperature?

Do you know what a latent heat is?
 
neginf said:
2. When a pot of water gets hot enough, small bubbles form.

Is that considered boiling ?

Not necessarily. The solubility of gasses in water decreases as temperature increases. Therefore, the small bubbles could actually be gasses (e.g. nitrogen, oxygen) coming out of solution rather than water vapor.

For the rest of the questions, you have to consider that your system may not have had enough time to reach equilibrium.
 
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