I think Helium is the only standout that cannot be made into a solid at low enough temperature. All solids may be made into a gas /plasma at high enough temperature.
add. note. Maybe He can be made solid with sufficient pressure - but maybe only the Sci-fi writers know.
No. First of all, liquids are not gasses. Liquids and gasses are two different states of matter. Second, you can have any mass of liquid or any mass of gas. Third, liquids are denser than gasses, meaning they have more mass for a given unit of volume.
molecules move more in gasses gasses>liquids>solids
When gasses lose heat they condense into liquids.
Yes It can, Gasses, Liquids, and Solids.
The intermolecular strength is higher in liquids than in gases.
gasses, liquids and solids
solids, liquids and gasses
A standard temperature and pressure, they are gasses. However under different temperatures and pressures they can be plasmas, liquids and solids.
it is more spread out
No, there is a fourth state of matter called plasma
No. First of all, liquids are not gasses. Liquids and gasses are two different states of matter. Second, you can have any mass of liquid or any mass of gas. Third, liquids are denser than gasses, meaning they have more mass for a given unit of volume.
Lower the temperature. Different parts will liquify and freeze at different temperatures.
molecules move more in gasses gasses>liquids>solids
Gases, liquids and solid all have different consistencies (densities). So the sound is changed
gasses
yes
-- The pressure on them could be different. -- Their temperatures could be different. -- They could be comprised of atoms or molecules with different weights.