The molecules remain identical (for example ice, water, vapors).
Molecules - They are more tightly packed in solids than liquids and gases
No. Although liquids consist of molecules, and so do gases and solids.
molecules move more in gasses gasses>liquids>solids
farther apart, resulting in fewer collisions between molecules. This allows sound waves to move with less resistance and at a slower pace compared to the more densely packed molecules in liquids and solids.
The motion of particles in gasses, liquids, and solids are all different. Gas particles can move much more quickly than solids.
in solids the molecules are rigid, hard to move, stuck together in liquids they are close together but can still move in gasses theyre far apart with alot of space between molecules, they can move very freely
Gases are compressible because their molecules bounce off of each other instead of sticking together. The molecules of solids and liquids stick together instead of moving freely.
All materials are formed from atoms.
Yes, conduction can occur in gases, but it is not as efficient as in solids and liquids. In gases, heat conduction primarily occurs through collisions between gas molecules. The rate of conduction in gases is lower compared to solids and liquids due to the larger distance between gas molecules.
solid is a state in which molecules are closely packed than liquids and gases. the inter molecular distance between the molecules of solids are less or negligible.thats why the solids are not compressible
No, liquids and solids do not diffuse as easily as gases due to their tightly packed molecular structure and lower kinetic energy. Diffusion in liquids is generally slower than in gases, but it can still occur over time. In solids, diffusion is even slower due to the rigid arrangement of molecules.
Solids have a fixed shape and volume, liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container, and gases have neither a fixed shape nor volume and expand to fill their container. The particles in solids are tightly packed, in liquids they are loosely packed, and in gases they are far apart. Additionally, solids have the strongest intermolecular forces, followed by liquids, then gases.