water Water is a gas when it is steam. It condenses to liquid, becoming water. It becomes solid when it freezes, and then becomes liquid again as it melts. The entire process depends on temperature. The molecular structure of water does not change throughout all these changes.
Sawdust is a solid.
There are three classic states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas. An example of a liquid is lemonade, an example of a solid is a book, and an example of a gas is nitric oxide.
Solid
Gas in atmosphere: argon Liquid in atmosphere: water (as rain) Solid in atmosphere: dust
Gas in atmosphere: argon Liquid in atmosphere: water (as rain) Solid in atmosphere: dust
10 examples of gas
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
There are 3 states of matter, solid, liquid and gas. It is neither gas or a liquid, so it has to be solid.
Phase change
A mist is a gas. It is not a solid or a liquid. An example of a solid would be a rock, of a liquid would be water and of gas would be steam. Other examples of are gas: steam vapor/vapour (water vapour)
The flat line means there is a phase change....for example from a solid to liquid, the substance is melting....from liquid to gas the liquid is being heated to form the gas.
Fog is a dispersion of liquid or solid aerosols from water in the atmosphere.