As at the present, there are 4 states of matter, namely solids, liquids, gases and plasma.
the 7th state of matter is dark matter
taxable
The most common type of energy/mass in the Universe is in the form of dark energy, followed by dark matter. Only about 4% of the Universe is in the form of "normal" (baryonic) matter. If it is specifically to this matter you refer: the most common state of matter is plasma, found in stars.
Because out in space their is a "thing" i guess you would call it, called black matter which makes up 98% of the universes matter and it is in a plasma state
false.
There is more gas as a state of matter than in any other state in the universe
If we are talking about normal matter, as opposed to the dark matter, that would be plasma.
There are many states of matter; you can see a list in the Wikipedia article on States of matter. However, there is no universal agreement on which states of matter should be accepted as such; nor is there of course any universal agreement on a numbering scheme. Thus, it doesn't really make sense to talk about "state of matter number x".
Based on the volume of measurable matter in the visible universe, and using most postulates regarding the state of "heavenly bodies" as measured, matter is primarily in gaseous form (gas planets, stars, nebulae). Only after gravitational compression to liquids or solids start to form, and this is a very small percentage of the overall matter in the vacuum of space.
The matter that existed since the Big Bang is expanding. A few decades ago, a "steady-state" theory was popular; according to it, matter was created as the Universe expanded, thus maintaining the matter density in the Universe constant. However, observational evidence did not support this theory.The matter that existed since the Big Bang is expanding. A few decades ago, a "steady-state" theory was popular; according to it, matter was created as the Universe expanded, thus maintaining the matter density in the Universe constant. However, observational evidence did not support this theory.The matter that existed since the Big Bang is expanding. A few decades ago, a "steady-state" theory was popular; according to it, matter was created as the Universe expanded, thus maintaining the matter density in the Universe constant. However, observational evidence did not support this theory.The matter that existed since the Big Bang is expanding. A few decades ago, a "steady-state" theory was popular; according to it, matter was created as the Universe expanded, thus maintaining the matter density in the Universe constant. However, observational evidence did not support this theory.
Most matter in the universe exists in the form of dark matter and dark energy, which are currently not fully understood by scientists. These two components make up the majority of the universe's mass-energy content, with ordinary matter (protons, neutrons, electrons) making up only a small percentage.
Plasma. That's ignoring "dark matter", because we don't yet know what that is.