by hitting your self in the head
As a rule of thumb ... which is not true in all cases ... the solid and liquid states will have similar densities with the liquid being the less dense of the two, and the density of the gas will be much lower.Near the critical point the density of the liquid and gas phases will be nearly identical.
No. Liquid oxygen and gaseous oxygen are the same substance, just in different states.
It is gaseous, liquid,
Ice is less dense than liquid water, and liquid water is more dense than water in the gaseous state.
solid = ice liquid = water gaseous = water vapour
Plasma
Solid, gaseous, liquid, and plasma
Typically: Solid, Liquid, and Gaseous States
Water exists in three states- solid, liquid, and gaseous
You are asking for comparatives. Each state can be any when compared to another state except the extremes. Liquid or gas either lower or higher depending on what you compare it to.
If a substance that exists in liquid state was not in liquid state then it was in its other states of matter namely solid, gaseous.
There is no such thing as a "gaseous liquid". There is a state of matter called a GAS and a state of matter called a LIQUID and matter can move between these states. Further, Television tubes contain a vacuum.