Myself? No I cannot.
However, particle accelerators do it all the time.
The kinetic energy of two particles smashing into each other becomes several more particles.
Light -- as "pure" an energy as can be imagined -- is often seen as becoming an electron positron pair.
Einstein's famous equation, E=mc2, basically means that energy and mass are interchangeable - that under the right conditions, mass can turn into pure energy, and energy can turn into mass. So, in essence, it can be said that matter can turn into pure energy if it is travelling at the speed of light.
The kinetic energy increases as you add more heat.
The heat and light from fire is energy. The smoke from fire contains particles of water, gases, and the materials being burned that are matter. The flame is made up of gases like vaporized fuel, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor and other gases. All these are matter - occupying space and have mass.
No. Because a pure substance, no matter if an element, compound, it can only contain one kind of particle .
The two types of matter that are pure substances are elements and compounds.
You can't. Pure energy needs matter in order to change or do anything.
It is
Light is NOT a state of matter - its photons, pure energy.
Einstein's famous equation, E=mc2, basically means that energy and mass are interchangeable - that under the right conditions, mass can turn into pure energy, and energy can turn into mass. So, in essence, it can be said that matter can turn into pure energy if it is travelling at the speed of light.
No. Light is energy, not matter. Therefore it is not a substance.
This has some truth in it. When antimatter and matter collide, they change into energy, so the world could in theory be destroyed. Antimatter-matter collisions produce huge amounts of energy.
I don't know what exactly you mean with "pure energy". Electricity always involves movement of matter, usually electrons, but it may be other charged particles, too.
The kinetic energy increases as you add more heat.
Heat, by definition is a property of matter, depending on the motion of the particles, which make up matter. There is no matter in a pure vacuum, and no heat. However, energy can be converted to different forms and matter at a given temperature radiates electromagnetic energy (cooling somewhat in the process, if no other energy is being received), and which is in wavelengths to be readily absorbed by other matter. The energy of the radiation then appears as heat in the absorbing material. This is the chief mechanism by which the sun heats the earth.
Yes, light is a form of pure energy as it has no mass. Similar to things like thunder and fire, light is none of the three phases of matter: solid, liquid, gas.
No. They are particles. However, when an electron is moving through space it HAS energy. Since an electron has mass it can not be considered to be pure energy. ------------------------------------ Yes they are energy. Energy is the ulimatum and only form energy matter comes out and matter is defined as the one which occupies space. Mass is the quantity of matter contained in a body. Hence though electron is massive particle it has come out of energy.
matter is present all around us. a better way to answer this question is the meaning of the word 'matter'. matter is anything that occupies space and has mass. every object occupies space and has mass-quantity or by physics terms density of an object.so to answer the question- yes, matter is all around us!