I think I'm going to say gas. One reason of that is because, gas can transmit sound and if you stick your head in water and shout something people that are next to you will only hear a mumble, gas doesnt do that.
The only way that the mass can change is if matter is added or taken away. The volume of a liquid can increase if heated, such as the liquid inside of a thermometer. The thermometer is sealed and no liquid gets in or out, so the mass of the liquid is unchanged. But when the temperature goes up, the liquid expands and is forced to go up the thermometer.
The shape of a liquid can be changed by putting it in a different shaped container. The volume can be changed (although hard to do) through extreme pressures and tempatures.
The upthrust is the volume, multiplied by the weight density of the liquid in which it is submerged - or the volume, times the mass density of the liquid, times the gravitational field.
A gas can change shape but it doesn't change volume, a liquid also changes shape but doesn't change volume.
Apparent expansion of a liquid is the increase in volume which appears to have taken place if no notice is taken. Real expansion is the actual increase in volume of a liquid per unit volume per degree rise in temperature
Because liquid can't retain its shape. It needs to be in a container to have a definite form.
The main difference between a liquid and a gas is the constancy of volume. Both are freely flowing, but a liquid will retain a constant volume no matter how much you try to squeeze into a container.
Some people actually can measure liquid volume with sound. This is because they know how long it takes sound to travel through a certain amount of liquid.
The particles of a liquid retain the same volume but are not fixed in place. As they retain the same volume no matter what container they are in, it is possible to pour juice into a glass without the particles dispersing as the particles of a gas would. Because the particles of a liquid are not fixed in place, as in a solid, the liquid can flow and fit itself to the shape of the glass.
The only way that the mass can change is if matter is added or taken away. The volume of a liquid can increase if heated, such as the liquid inside of a thermometer. The thermometer is sealed and no liquid gets in or out, so the mass of the liquid is unchanged. But when the temperature goes up, the liquid expands and is forced to go up the thermometer.
The shape of a liquid can be changed by putting it in a different shaped container. The volume can be changed (although hard to do) through extreme pressures and tempatures.
The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.The volume of a liquid is the amount of space occupied by the liquid.
No. Solids are resistant to changes in both shape and volume.
Liquid has a definite volume in a container.
Gas is much less dense than liquids or solids, which means that it has fewer particles (the particles generally being atoms or molecules) per unit volume, than there are in the denser materials. Hence, if something is travelling through a gas it is not going to hit as many particles a it would if it were travelling through a liquid or solid. And any time a photon hits another particle, it may be absorbed, or reflected, or defelcted in some manner by that particle.
Volume is the amount of space the liquid takes up.
Volume is the amount of space the liquid takes up.