they are all states of matter
matter in which particles are free to move in all directions until they have spread evenly throughout their container is a gas. liquids have a definite volume but no definite shape. the particles of a solid are packed closely together and are constantly vibrating in place
Plasma and gas are alike in that both are fluids. A liquid is a fluid, but it takes the shape of an open container it is placed in, and plasma and gas don't. They go everywhere. Further, both represent states of matter at greater thermal energies than liquids or solids.
plasma has more energy then gas and its electrons are not bound to a specific atom.
A gas is usually a gas at ambient temperature while a plasma occurs at highly elevated temperatures.
No they differ as gas has neutral atoms or molecules where as plasma has atoms or molecules in ionic state ie charged one.
plasma
Both plasmas and gases can behave in a similar way; for example, they are both fluids (or gas-like). But plasmas can be quite different to gases because plasmas respond strongly to electromagnetic forces that can result in plasmas emitting a range of electromagnetic radiation themselves (radio waves, light, x-rays, etc); 99.999% of the visible universe is in the plasma state because cosmic gas is not visible.
There are now five states of matter which are the BE Condensate, solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas.
Fluids are substances that flow. Liquids flow, gases flow, and ionized gases (plasmas) flow. Thus, they are all fluids.
The order is: - solid (the densest) - liquid - gas - plasma
The particles of a solid are packed together tight, and since they are, they don't move, they vibrate back and forth. The particles of a gas are few and far between, so they fly around randomly. Hope this helps.
"The characteristics of plasmas are significantly different from those of ordinary neutral gases so that plasmas are considered a distinct "fourth state of matter." from pluto.space.swri.edu
Solids, liquids, gases, plasmas, and Bose-Einstein condensates are all different states of matter.
Both plasmas and gases can behave in a similar way; for example, they are both fluids (or gas-like). But plasmas can be quite different to gases because plasmas respond strongly to electromagnetic forces that can result in plasmas emitting a range of electromagnetic radiation themselves (radio waves, light, x-rays, etc); 99.999% of the visible universe is in the plasma state because cosmic gas is not visible.
Matter. Everything. Gases,Liquids,Solids and Plasmas.
No, matter can also be found as liquids, gases, or plasmas.
No. There are four types of matter, solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas. If something is a liquid, it cannot be a gas.
Solids, liquids, gases, plasmas, and Bose-Einstein condensates
All gasses that are not noble gases (well xenon and heaviei forms some interesting "patterns", if not truly molecules), or plasmas, are molecular gases.
There are now five states of matter which are the BE Condensate, solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas.
Fluids are substances that flow. Liquids flow, gases flow, and ionized gases (plasmas) flow. Thus, they are all fluids.
nebulae
nebulae