Just a complete wild and likely inaccurate guess, but maybe due to extreme plantary pressure and deep underground freezing rivers could flow in a kind of crushed ice form? If that's what you mean, not sure if any would exsist on earth.
Think of it this way, do you say molten lava/magma? No, you say molten rock. Same applies here, you'd say molten ice, but not molten water because that's plain silly.
Think of it this way, do you say molten lava/magma? No, you say molten rock. Same applies here, you'd say molten ice, but not molten water because that's plain silly.
While that is true, you have to admit that Molten water sounds pretty awesome.
I wonder what water in a plasma state would look like.
I don't think compounds like water can exist as a plasma. Plasmas are ionized atoms and to become ionized is to strip off the electrons from atoms and by doing so, you are left with just the plain elements. Compounds are created by the exchange (or sharing) of electrons; ionized substances have effectively no electrons that are attached to nuclei. You can have ionized hydrogen, helium, oxygen, neon, etc. but not a compound.
As for the OP. molten water doesn't make any sense. Of course water is molten. But then you might as well say gaseous steam and solid ice. Water already has names for its different states and the name already implies what the preword would be saying about it. Molten ice makes sense, but it really isn't as meaningful as molten rock because water in its liquid state is much more known (ok, they both are really well known) and thus it sort of takes a lower level word and modifies it. If that makes any sense at all.
Some people really need to stay away from the government propaganda department. Let the brain-washing machines have a day off, they must need maintenance by now.
I don't think compounds like water can exist as a plasma. Plasmas are ionized atoms and to become ionized is to strip off the electrons from atoms and by doing so, you are left with just the plain elements. Compounds are created by the exchange (or sharing) of electrons; ionized substances have effectively no electrons that are attached to nuclei. You can have ionized hydrogen, helium, oxygen, neon, etc. but not a compound.
A few friends of mine drew the conclusion that it would be more of steam in a plasma state. Though they pointed out as you said, it would not be a solid compound but a bit of a mess.
But yeah I really have no idea. xD
Molten ice is....water, I guess.
While that is true, you have to admit that Molten water sounds pretty awesome.
Solid. Liquid. Gas.
What about plasma, Bose-Einstein condensate, and quark-gluon plasma?
http://pcpartpicker.com/user/SteevyT/saved/21PI
I'm still learning the basic of Chemistry okay,
Venit, quessit, induravit.
Maybe it looks like a gas/slime like material. It may look like a mixture of both gass and slime. But that me just me thinking out loud.
I don't think compounds like water can exist as a plasma. Plasmas are ionized atoms and to become ionized is to strip off the electrons from atoms and by doing so, you are left with just the plain elements. Compounds are created by the exchange (or sharing) of electrons; ionized substances have effectively no electrons that are attached to nuclei. You can have ionized hydrogen, helium, oxygen, neon, etc. but not a compound.
As for the OP. molten water doesn't make any sense. Of course water is molten. But then you might as well say gaseous steam and solid ice. Water already has names for its different states and the name already implies what the preword would be saying about it. Molten ice makes sense, but it really isn't as meaningful as molten rock because water in its liquid state is much more known (ok, they both are really well known) and thus it sort of takes a lower level word and modifies it. If that makes any sense at all.
Woah never knew those existed.
hi
And plasma.
And to finish up the question, there's no molten water. Boil it.
A few friends of mine drew the conclusion that it would be more of steam in a plasma state. Though they pointed out as you said, it would not be a solid compound but a bit of a mess.
Venit, quessit, induravit.