Particle arrangement of SOLID particles are tightly close to each other, while LIQUID are less closer and with GAS are very far from each other. If you try to check that out in a microscope you will identify each particle and see what I meant. Except for GAS, you may not be able to do so of course. From the word GAS itself.
liquids because water and other liquids take shapes of their containers
Particle arrangement of SOLID particles are tightly close to each other, while LIQUID are less closer and with GAS are very far from each other. If you try to check that out in a microscope you will identify each particle and see what I meant. Except for GAS, you may not be able to do so of course. From the word GAS itself.
When two liquids that will mix with each other are placed together, one will diffuse throughout the other but at a much slower rate than in the case with gases. This property is due to the arrangement of the particles in a liquid as opposed to the arrangement of molecules in a gas.
The particles in liquid move freely.
Solid - Particles vibrate and rotate about a fixed position and do not diffuse measurably Liquid - Particles move freely in all directions slowly and diffuse slowly Gas - Particles move freely in all directions rapidly and diffuse rapidly
it is because it is used to to explain the properties of solids,liquids and gasses in terms of arrangement and movement in particles.
liquids because water and other liquids take shapes of their containers
They dont
Liquids can flow, their particles can move about more than solid particles, you can't compress them, and they are quite dense.
Particles are microscopic and explain the properties of liquids, solids, and gases. The strength of the bonds between particles is different in each state. In digestion, the chunks of foods we eat must be broken down into particles to be used by the body.
Solid - particles are tightly packed, in a regular pattern Liquid - particles are close together, with no regular arrangement Gas - particles are extremely far apart, with no regular arrangement http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/liquids/character.html
Particle arrangement of SOLID particles are tightly close to each other, while LIQUID are less closer and with GAS are very far from each other. If you try to check that out in a microscope you will identify each particle and see what I meant. Except for GAS, you may not be able to do so of course. From the word GAS itself.
When two liquids that will mix with each other are placed together, one will diffuse throughout the other but at a much slower rate than in the case with gases. This property is due to the arrangement of the particles in a liquid as opposed to the arrangement of molecules in a gas.
(This Question Can Not Have An Awnser Due To Science Book Copyright! All comments leave to wikiawnsers@awnsers.com! Thanks!)If you pour a liquid in a container or a cup, the liquid takes the shape of the container or cup, and the particles in the liquid ( which is in the container ) only move a little bit, the particles in the liquid is not gas ( which moves everywhere ) even when liquids change shape, they dont change volume. A gas if you put helium in a balloon the particles doesnt really take the shape it makes the shape and the particles of the gas in the cylinder (Helium tank ) are much closer together than the particles of the gas in the balloons. Then a solid, differing arrangements of particles in crystalline solids and amorphous solids lead to different properties. the particles in an amorphous solid do not have an orderly arrangement. the particles in a crystalline solid have a very orderly arrangement.
Gases, liquids and solids are all made up of microscopic particles, but the behaviors of these particles differ in the three phases. Gas is well separated with no regular arrangement. liquid are close together with no regular arrangement. solid are tightly packed, usually in a regular pattern.
Yes, some liquids have electrically charged particles, such as salt water.
no