Don't count my word on this, but I think to prove a liquid is a liquid has to do with the molecules, I believe if the molecules in the water are moving, that is what makes it a liquid. If it moves faster it'll be a gas (water vapor), if it dose not move at all it will be a solid (ice).
For proving u can take a 100ml watter in a glass then put one dropp of ink in the water after some time it will automatecelly mix in the water then u will see that the water will not increase that proof that there is intermolecular spaces in the water
Get a water bottle fill it with water and turn it upside down youwill see bubbles formed inside the water bottle.
Gas.
Matter does.
The answer will be the sum of the Flask A and Flask B. The Reason: A gas occupies all the space within a container.
No, actually. Volume is how much three-dimensional space that a solid, liquid, gas, plasma, or even a shape occupies.
Volume is the space. period.
The classical definition says anything that occupies space is matter. To prove air occupies space we can do a small experiment. Take a balloon and blow air in it. The balloon expands and this proves that air occupies space. And thus we can prove air is matter.
Inflate a balloon.
Yes, the sun.
Try to run really fast through a wall.
by inflating a ballon
all matter occupies space but its not necessary to have colour as gas occupies space and doesn't has colour but its a matter.
a phase change from solid to gas
The property of air that a gas exhibits is that it can be compressed and it occupies space.
Anything that lives except air, light, sound.
Any solid, liquid, or gas contains matter and occupies space.
Gas.
yes. Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. Argon is a gas, it occupies space and has mass. Hence it is considered as matter.