Gravity.
The gravitational pull of the Earth will exert a force on anything with a mass and pull it towards the centre of the Earth. As we're essentially standing on the surface of a sphere, the centre of the Earth is pretty much straight down and gravity will pull liquids to the bottom of any container.
No. Liquids always cover the bottom of the container, but may not fill it if you haven't
poured in enough liquid. Gases don't care ... they always fill the container.
Yes, liquids take the shape of its container. A liquid does not change volume, unlike a gas, but it does change shape according to its container, similar to a gas. A solid does not change shape of volume according to its container.
No, a liquid does not necessarily fill the container it is in; however liquids always take the shape of their container. The one has to do with quantity, the other with fluidity.
not proper grammer i can not understand what your question is
It always will, but it depends on how much liquid there is and how large the container is.
yes it does because that is a physical property
yes, unless it is frozen
No, gas
Yes
No, a liquid does not necessarily fill the container it is in; however liquids always take the shape of their container.
yes
Solids and liquids both have fixed volumes... in that if they are put into a container, they will not expand to fill the container. Gases on the other hand, do the exact opposite - they expand to fill their containers, thus not having fixed volumes.
A 10 ML of liquid can't fill a 20 ML container because although liquids do not have a definite shape they have a definite volume.
Solids have a definite shape and volume. Liquids have a definite volume, but no definite shape - they take the shape of their container. Gases have no definite volume and no definite shape - they expand to fill their entire container.
No, a liquid does not necessarily fill the container it is in; however liquids always take the shape of their container.
A gas will always have the same mass, as it fills a container it's density lowers. Liquids are non- compressible, meaning their density are always the same, for example water's density is 1.0
yes
Solids are rigid and incompressible. Liquids have fixed volume but match their container. Gases completely fill their container.
Solids and liquids both have fixed volumes... in that if they are put into a container, they will not expand to fill the container. Gases on the other hand, do the exact opposite - they expand to fill their containers, thus not having fixed volumes.
Yes, a gas will always fill the container that it is in.
they do not have a set volume, thus they completely fill any container that they are in.
they do not have a set volume, thus they completely fill any container that they are in.
A 10 ML of liquid can't fill a 20 ML container because although liquids do not have a definite shape they have a definite volume.
Liquids always take the shape of the container that they are in. This is the basic definition of a liquid.
Yes
maintain their own shape and do not take the shape of their container.