Conductivity - either thermal conductivity, or electrical conductivity.
The property of matter that allows a substance to transfer heat or electricity is known as conductivity. Materials that are good conductors allow heat or electricity to flow easily through them, while materials that are poor conductors, or insulators, impede the flow of heat or electricity.
Electric charge is the property of matter that gives rise to both electricity and magnetism.
Combustibility is a chemical property of matter. It describes how easily a substance can undergo combustion or burn in the presence of oxygen.
Matter is the only option that is opaque. Opaque materials do not allow light to pass through them. Sound, electricity, and light can pass through certain materials, but not matter.
Yes. The taxes on owed on the property, no matter who owns the property.
Glass?
solid, metallic
No, mass is not a thermometric property. Thermometric properties are characteristics that can be easily measured with a thermometer, such as temperature. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and is not related to temperature.
No, electricity itself is not made up of matter. It is the flow of electrons through a conductor. Electrons are subatomic particles that carry a negative charge.
Electrical property of matter that creates a force between objects is called static electricity. Static electricity is caused by the imbalance of positive and negative charges on objects, resulting in attraction or repulsion between them due to the presence of electric fields.
Yes, compressibility is a physical property of matter that describes how easily a substance can be compressed or its volume reduced. It is often used to characterize the behavior of gases and liquids under pressure. Materials with high compressibility can be easily compressed, while those with low compressibility are difficult to compress.
True. Flammability is a chemical property of matter. It is not a physical property of matter. When wood burns, it changes to ashes, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and other gases. After burning, it is no longer wood.