No. It takes on the shape of whatever you put it in.
Vapor does not have a fixed shape. Vapor is just a gas near its evaporation temperature.
No. vapor takes the shape and volume of its container.
Vapors haven't a definite shape or volume.
Vapour is amorphous
no
Water vapour does not have definite shape and does not have definite volume.
Bromine. This is a liquid at room temperature and pressure but fumes a rich reddy brown vapour. Keep it in a fume cupboard.
They keep their shape.
because the shape of a protein allows it to perform its particular job
they keep their shape because of pellicle
Water vapour does not have definite shape and does not have definite volume.
No. It expands to fill any container it's in. If you pump it out of one container and into a different one, it changes its shape to match the new container.
Bromine. This is a liquid at room temperature and pressure but fumes a rich reddy brown vapour. Keep it in a fume cupboard.
It has to keep its shape to do its particular job.
Mater in the liquid phase would display this characteristic. In the vapour and plasma phase both the shape AND volume are not fixed.
They keep their shape.
All vapours, gasses, etc, can only have a definite shape if they are inside a container.
To keep the Liebig condenser cool so it can condense the vapour
because the shape of a protein allows it to perform its particular job
they keep their shape because of pellicle
you can boil the water but keep the vapour a.k.a distill it. If you only boil it the salt will remain.
vapour pressure lowering