No. Plasmas are ionized gas.
Gasses and plasmas.
Plasmas do not have a definite volume or shape because their particles are in constant motion and can easily expand to fill any container they are in. This makes plasmas different from solid, liquid, and gas states of matter which have defined shapes and volumes.
Plasma is a hot, glowing gas, which is as fluid as any other gas and it will assume any shape or volume that its container, or that other constraining forces will permit.
A material in such a state can be described as a plasma, which comprises charged particles without a fixed form or volume. Plasmas are often found at high temperatures, such as in stars or lightning bolts, where the constituent particles are highly energized and form a distinctive state of matter.
The four states of matter are solid (ice), liquid (water), gas (oxygen), and plasma (lightning). Solids have a definite shape and volume, liquids have a definite volume but take the shape of their container, gases have neither definite shape nor volume, and plasmas have neither definite shape nor volume and conduct electricity.
Solids have definite shape and definite volume. Liquids have not definite shape but have definite volume. Gases have neither definite shape not definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
The state of matter 1- having definite shape and definite volume issolid. 2- having indefinite shape but definite volume is liquid. and 3- having indefinite shape and indefinite volume is gas, while super heated gas having nuclei in a sea of electrons is plasma,the 4th state of matter the huge amount of plasma is in our nearby, the sun.
Solid, liquid, gas, plasma, bose-einstein condensate, liquid crystal, supersolid, superfluid, supercritical, ... If you look at the Wikipedia article on "states of matter", it will list about 17 different states of matter.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.
WATER has no definite shape but has definite volume.