Yes they do have spaces between them, But it is very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very little...
Yes. Molecules have a somewhat rounded shape, and it's impossible to completely fill space with a shape like that.
no, there is nothing between particles of matter.
No
empty space
Porosity refers to the amount of empty space that is between particles of material. When something has a low porosity, it does not have much of this space between its particles.
A solid has little free space between particles.
Empty Space.
Some particles can cross easily the atom.
empty space
Empty space, mainly.
Essentially yes - it is empty space. there may be some stray particles now and then but for the most part it is empty.
Because the space between atomic particles, atoms and molecules is empty.
Porosity refers to the amount of empty space that is between particles of material. When something has a low porosity, it does not have much of this space between its particles.
Nothing. Just space. And the atoms of those gases are mostly space, for the electrons and nuclei take up little space. So what we consider matter is mostly space...
Very probable this space is empty, is vacuum.
vacuum
Charged particles.
The spaces between particles in a solid are very close together, forming a closely packed arrangement. In a liquid, the particles are closer together than in a gas but still have some space between them. In a gas, the particles are much farther apart and have large spaces between them.
A hard vacuum or interstellar space.
Yes, you can travel through empty space. The Sun, Earth, moon, satellites, space ships, atoms, and subatomic particles all travel through empty space. Greater than 99.999% of matter is empty space.