Solid
Steel is a very wierd product which is made from iron. It does not obey the rules and it is an organism which posses none of these. It has a powdery state which is in between a solid and a gas.
Solids: concrete, glass, steel Liquids: water, beer, wine Gases: air, carbon dioxide, methane
Steel and aluminum are solids. Gasoline and water are liquids.
Solids typically have more elasticity than liquids. This is because solids have a more ordered arrangement of particles, allowing them to deform under stress and return to their original shape when the stress is removed. Liquids, on the other hand, have a more disordered arrangement of particles and tend to flow and change shape easily when subjected to stress.
No, steel is a specific alloy made primarily from iron and carbon. It is not simply combining two solids, but a precise mixture of additional elements along with proper heat treatment to create its unique properties.
Magnitude in thermal expansion is how much the substance can expand, so, the relative order of magnitude of thermal expansion is: solid<liquid<gases. Gases expand more than liquid, and liquid more than solid.
Sound travels best through solids, such as steel and iron, because the molecules are closely packed together which allows sound waves to move efficiently. Solids are denser than liquids or gases, so they transmit sound more effectively. Glass and copper also transmit sound well, but not as efficiently as steel and iron. Water is a good conductor of sound, but not as good as solids.
Rock, steel and wood.
brass, steel, bronze
Yes. The denser the medium, the faster it travels. So, it travels fastest in solids, and slowest in gases. It can range from only about 340 meters per second in air, to over 2000 meters per second in steel.
Sound travels 5 times fast under water then in the air and even faster through solids. For example speed of sound in: Air = 330 m/s Water = 1500 m/s Steel = 6000 m/s
Sound travels fastest through solids because the molecules are closer together than in liquids or gases. Sound travels fastest through steel.