Air is certainly matter; air has mass, has takes up volume. I am not sure that the definition you give is one scientists would use; we would more likely say matter has properties of mass, volume and can be detected by appropriate instruments.
Light and sound are not matter. Unlike air, they have no mass or volume.
light waves travel through a matter, such as air water and others
Air is considered matter because it has mass and occupies space, meeting the definition of matter. Light, on the other hand, is made up of massless particles called photons and does not have mass or occupy space like particles of matter do.
Light travels in the air phase of matter compared to the liquids and solids.
Transparent matter transmits light but does not alter or scatter the light passing through. This allows light to pass through without distortion, making the object seem almost invisible. Examples of such matter include glass and air.
Examples of matter: water, air, iron. Non-examples of matter: light, sound, thoughts.
no light and sound is energy not matter because it is the massless partical.
1) light2) heat3) sound4) energy*Note: Air dose have matter because if you blow air into a balloon it gets bigger
When light passes through transparent matter, such as air or glass, it is referred to as transmission. The material allows the light to travel through without significant absorption or reflection.
Light is not matter, it is energy.
Five things that aren't matter are: sound, light, heat, gravity, and speed. Five things that are matter are air, water, foods, pencils, and paper.
a space vacuum meaning no "air" just empty space