No, energy an matter are different phenomenons.
Energy is the ability of a system to do work (ie to move matter).
Matter has mass, and is related to energy by E = mcc.
Yes, it is possible to transform energy into matter. Doing so would require an enormous amount of energy, but it is theoretically possible.
It does if its temperature is anywhere above zero Kelvin.
Gas IS not a kind of energy, but different gases can CONTAIN energy. Certain gases contain chemical energy (they can be burned). There is also energy related to the pressure on the gas.Gas IS not a kind of energy, but different gases can CONTAIN energy. Certain gases contain chemical energy (they can be burned). There is also energy related to the pressure on the gas.Gas IS not a kind of energy, but different gases can CONTAIN energy. Certain gases contain chemical energy (they can be burned). There is also energy related to the pressure on the gas.Gas IS not a kind of energy, but different gases can CONTAIN energy. Certain gases contain chemical energy (they can be burned). There is also energy related to the pressure on the gas.
I assume you are referring to the Law of Conservation of Matter. It states that during a chemical bond, energy and matter cannot be created, nor destroyed; the amount of energy and matter at the start is identical to the amount at the end.
matter and thermal energy
Any forms of matter contain a lot of potential energy.
This can be answered by observation and physics:Quarks are matter and matter does not contain all energy as there is free energy available in the universe as heat, radiation and gravity etc.The theory of relativity relates the amount of energy in any given amount of matter by the equation E=mC2. As a consequence, as the mass of all quarks or any quark is finite, it cannot contain infinite energy.
Matter is the basis for everything. Anything that exists has matter. Dark matter are anomalies that cannot account for "missing matter". Matter does not contain the solar energy and radio signals that travel through "empty space".
solid , liquid , gas
Energy (such as light) and space (which may contain matter, but is not made out of it).
atoms Answer #2: Matter is composed of energy, hence Einstein's equation: e = mc2 where m stands for the mass of the matter and e is the energy it contains.
It does if its temperature is anywhere above zero Kelvin.
Yes, it is possible to transform energy into matter. Doing so would require an enormous amount of energy, but it is theoretically possible.
no. most reactors use water as coolant and/or moderator, but nuclear energy is energy and contains no matter.
it depends on the "energy" you mean, but since all matter contains energy of some form (such as the kinetic energy of its moving particles), then yes, it has energy.
No. Heat is a measure of molecular energy in matter, a true vacuum would not contain matter. However, since there is no such thing as a complete vacuum, then Yes.
when you use batteries you use chemical energy. Batteries contain stored chemical energy that can be changed to heat, light, sound or mechamical energy.Chemical energy is energy stored in the arrangement of particals of matter.