No, gas particles can touch each other when they collide.
Yes! Particles and atoms and ever larger assemblages of atoms. All this is a consequence of quantum mechanics.
One side has a positive charge and the other a negative. Only the opposites will connect or attached each other. The same charge will actually push or repel the other one away. You ever heard the saying, 'opposites attract? That's why.
The forces of gravity are always attractive ... pulling masses together toward each other. The math of gravity says that the gravitational force could push objects apart IF one of them had negative mass. But we haven't ever observed any of that, and we don't actually know what it is.
It's the emission of electromagnetic energy from something, not the transfer. That em-radiation could travel for ever across the universe, never interacting with anything ever again and it would still be radiation.________________________________________________________Not all radiation is electromagnetic engery. Electromagnetic energy is transfered by way of photons. Photons are emited through gamma radiation and black body radiation. Nuclear decay of alpha particles and beta particles (which are also considered radiations) are actual particles that have mass, and are not electromagnetic radiation.
Those which have a "color charge": quarks and gluons. The strong nuclear force is so strong that we can't actually directly observe isolated particles with a color charge. It takes so much energy to pull them apart that new particles are created, so all we can ever actually see are color-neutral particles like mesons (a quark-antiquark pair) and baryons (three quarks, or three antiquarks) with color charges that "cancel out". The residual strong force also serves to hold nucleons (neutrons and protons, both of which are baryons) together in the atomic nucleus.
of course they did
no
yes perpendicular lines are at right angles to each other. Therefore they have to touch eventually
Perpendicular lines intersect each other at 90 degrees but parallel lines never touch each other
No, parallel actually means that the lines will never touch or cross
At particle level in a solid, the energy is only ever kinetic. More energy means the particles move more rapidly. This means they bump against each other more. If they bump against each other rapidly enough, they will begin to separate and the solid will melt.
Parallel lines are two or more lines that run perfectly straight, into infinite, next to each other so that none of the lines will ever touch.
No, sense we are said to be electrons we do not touch anything.We just contact other electron this is NEWTONS Law.
They barley saw each other
No two lines of constant latitude ever touch or cross each other. They are the same distance apart everywhere. That's why they're often referred to as "parallels" of latitude.
No, particles never stop moving.
Yes but parallel lines wont ever touch.