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when the temperature of a sample of liquid increases, what else increas…

Question

when the temperature of a sample of liquid increases, what else increases? the strength of the bonds between particles the distance between particles the kinetic energy of particles the nuclear energy of particles

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

To solve this, we analyze each option:

  • The strength of bonds between particles: Heating a liquid generally doesn't increase bond strength; in fact, higher temperature can weaken bonds (e.g., leading to vaporization), so this is incorrect.
  • The distance between particles: While in some cases (like approaching boiling), distance might increase, but the direct effect of temperature increase is on kinetic energy first. Also, for a liquid, the primary change with temperature rise (before phase change) is in particle motion, not immediate large - scale distance increase. So this is not the most direct or primary change.
  • The kinetic energy of particles: Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles. So when the temperature of a liquid sample increases, the average kinetic energy of its particles increases. This is a fundamental concept in thermodynamics and kinetic theory of matter.
  • The nuclear energy of particles: Nuclear energy is related to the nucleus of an atom (like in nuclear reactions). A change in temperature of a liquid (a bulk property related to particle motion) does not affect the nuclear energy of particles.

Answer:

The kinetic energy of particles