Yes, for example the human body, with static electricity.
Ya! Depending on the type of solid it can have negatively, neutrally, or positively charged particles.
yes
The mass of water will change because when anything become in the solid form so its weight would be increased . For example when we put some water in it so its weight is less but after freezing its weight become increased because it change in to solid form
Mercury become a solid at -38,829 oC.
Dissociation of a soluble ionic salt produce ions.As an example:NaCl----------------Na+ + Cl-So the solution is electrically conductive; the solid, crystalline sodium chloride is not condutive - it is without mobile ions.
This is an odd example. Anything that is NOT solid earth is a non-example. So, a bird is not solid earth.
Almost all of them if not all of them. Off hand I can not think of any metal that does not conduct electricity in the solid phase, I'm a little unsure about the liquid phase but I do beliece that the resistnce is still fairly low.
In a solid sodium chloride ions are not free; in solution or melting sodium chloride become an electrolyte, with free ions.
Anything below 76 degrees pacific liquids become solid. Anything above 76 degrees it will be liquid.
They are charged by the transfer of electrons! :)
In water sodium chloride is dissociated and the solution become an electrolyte, electrically conductive. The solid NaCl is not an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is not electrically conductive.
The aqueous and molten solutions are electrically conducting
A solid is as solid as solid gets. Liquids freeze and become solids. Solids become denser solids.
Any element can become a solid at a certain temperature so yes, it can become a solid.
Anything below the temperature of 76 degrees liquids become solids. Anything above this 76 degrees becomes liquids again.
When it's in a solid form no but if it is a liquid (when placed in a solution) then yes it does conduct electricity.
Like anything else, it cools. When enough energy is removed, it will freeze and become a solid.
In physics, the four states of matter gas, liquid, solid, and plasma. Although people are more familiar with the three states of gas, liquid, and solid, plasma is more abundant in the universe. About 99 percent of matter in the universe is of this form. Plasma is an ionized gas that consists of electrically charged particles. A lightning strike is an example of plasma in nature.