There are (believe it or not) four states of matter. They are solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. However, since plasma is rarely found on Earth, it is not considered matter.
States of matter is any solid, liquid, or gas.
the states of matter are found in just about any existing substance or object.
Any gas, liquid or solid can exist in all states of matter.
The Law of Conservation of Matter states that in any reaction, matter is neither created nor destroyed
false
States of matter are bulk properties. A single atom does not have any bulk properties, so it has no defined state of matter.
There are many states of matter; you can see a list in the Wikipedia article on States of matter. However, there is no universal agreement on which states of matter should be accepted as such; nor is there of course any universal agreement on a numbering scheme. Thus, it doesn't really make sense to talk about "state of matter number x".
The most obvious one is that the states of matter are a "bulk property" of a large collection of interacting particles of matter, while particles of matter are the individual constituents (e.g. molecules, atoms, subatomic particles) that matter is made of and do not have any "bulk properties".
Yes, any element or compound can exist in all three states of matter. Though, some compounds or elements need special conditions in order to be one state of matter.
Better name the state of matter - numbering may not be uniform. At any rate, with at least 15-20 different states of matter, it gets confusing if you try to number them.I would suppose that sound can travel through any matter, as long as it is not too tenuous.Better name the state of matter - numbering may not be uniform. At any rate, with at least 15-20 different states of matter, it gets confusing if you try to number them.I would suppose that sound can travel through any matter, as long as it is not too tenuous.Better name the state of matter - numbering may not be uniform. At any rate, with at least 15-20 different states of matter, it gets confusing if you try to number them.I would suppose that sound can travel through any matter, as long as it is not too tenuous.Better name the state of matter - numbering may not be uniform. At any rate, with at least 15-20 different states of matter, it gets confusing if you try to number them.I would suppose that sound can travel through any matter, as long as it is not too tenuous.
Temperature effects the states of matter
There are NOT gift requirements in Washington and for that matter none in any of the states.