All gases can and will expand in the right conditions.
Gases expand as they are heated, as do nearly all liquids. In the course of expansion, the molecules move away from each other.
It will expand in all directions.
All objects do not expand on heating.....Only metals expand on heating.....non metals like wood,plastic,etc do not expand on heating.
When the temperature of a substance is increased, its molecules or atoms jiggle faster and move farther apart, on the average. The result is an expansion of the substance. With a few exceptions, all forms of matter--solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas--generally expand when they are heated and contract when they are cooled.
All of them can expand - for example, when they are heated. Gases usually expand more than solids or liquids.
All gases can and will expand in the right conditions.
Solids, liquids and gases expand when heated, liquids and gases expand much more that solids. Gases can be compressed
Gases expand as they are heated, as do nearly all liquids. In the course of expansion, the molecules move away from each other.
It will expand in all directions.
Rubber contracts when heated.
Charles law describes how gases expand when heated. In chemistry, this affects the rate of reaction, densities, and volume, all of which are essential to predicting outcomes of reactions.
All objects do not expand on heating.....Only metals expand on heating.....non metals like wood,plastic,etc do not expand on heating.
Liquids expand more than solids on heating
All things expand when they are heated. Gases expand the most, liquids less than gasses, and solids expand the least. Yes they do. Take metal for example it expands when it gets hot.
All liquids expand when heated. e.g. Mercury in a thermometer. One exception may be water when heated form 0 to 4 degrees Celsius.
Yes. That is one of the properties of gases.