Both. The upper mantle is solid and the lower mantle is liquid.
Space is neither a solid nor a liquid; it is a vacuum, meaning it is mostly empty of matter. It is a dynamic environment filled with various elements such as gas, dust, and radiation, but it lacks the properties of a solid or liquid.
Technically, most of the volume of outer space is filled with what is called plasma. This is like gas but the nucleus and electrons of the atoms are floating separately and it does not follow the same science laws as gas. There are various theories on why the atoms are split up, involving heat from stars, ancient supernova explosions, or even more ancient quasars.
The rest of space is gas and dust. The dust is little solid particles. Nobody knows the exact percentages of plasma, gas, or dust in space. However, space has so little matter that it is mostly just empty, with nothing in a typical cubic centimeter.
A vacuum - is a completely empty space - the complete absence of any gas, liquid or solid.
Essentially any matter ( Solid, liquid or gas ) But not in a vacuum (ie in space)
Solid to liquid is known as melting, where a solid substance transitions into a liquid state by absorbing heat energy. Liquid to solid is known as freezing, where a liquid substance transitions into a solid state by releasing heat energy.
heat doesnt travel from a solid to a liquid. a solid is heated up and turned into a liquid.
Essentially any matter ( Solid, liquid or gas ) But not in a vacuum (ie in space)
A liquid or solid will not take up a larger space than the space it occupies; even if more space is freely available.On the other hand, both a liquid and a solid are incompressible, for most practical purposes; that is, you can't compress it to use less space than the space it uses, either.A liquid or solid will not take up a larger space than the space it occupies; even if more space is freely available.On the other hand, both a liquid and a solid are incompressible, for most practical purposes; that is, you can't compress it to use less space than the space it uses, either.A liquid or solid will not take up a larger space than the space it occupies; even if more space is freely available.On the other hand, both a liquid and a solid are incompressible, for most practical purposes; that is, you can't compress it to use less space than the space it uses, either.A liquid or solid will not take up a larger space than the space it occupies; even if more space is freely available.On the other hand, both a liquid and a solid are incompressible, for most practical purposes; that is, you can't compress it to use less space than the space it uses, either.
It is solid as it doesn't flow like a liquid or has vast space between its molecules like gases.
solid and liquid because gas doesn't take up space it just floats away
A solid is more compact.
solid, liquid, and gases
they all take up space
All three do.
Any solid, liquid, or gas contains matter and occupies space.
The empty space could be filled with liquid or solid matter.
molecules of a solid break up get's into the space that is in between the liquid molecules
There is three states of matter.Solid,Liquid and gas. So nope. Gas is neither solid nor liquid. It is a matter becoz it occupy space.
solid and liquid because gas doesn't take up space it just floats away