Certainly there is a limit, considering that the object is not deformed by the power employed to compress or stretch.
a liquid can be compressed
baybi
No, compressed air cannot penetrate the skin.
No, liquid cannot be compressed because you use syringe put water and you use your hand block the hole you push you cannot push.
When a coil spring is compressed the spring compression tends to vary inversely with the length of the spring to the point where the spring cannot be compressed further without damage. In tension, the spring tension varies directly with the length but only so long as the elastic modulus is not reached. At that length, the spring becomes permanently deformed or "sprung". Depending on the representation of the drawing, the vector of the spring in compression will be opposite that of the same spring in tension. That is to say, if you push the spring to the left the force will be negative while a pull to the right will be positive so the spring in compression will push right (positive) and the spring in tension will pull left (negative).
A solid has a fixed shape and volume and cannot be compressed
Yes, gold can be compressed if you compress it to 2 million atmosphere at room temperature.
The question is about an oxymoronic expression. A constant cannot be a variable and a variable cannot be a constant!
non-renewable, because once it is gone you cannot get it back.
Liquids are cannot be compressed because the particles are close together and compact- this means that the particles cannot get closer together. Therefore liquids can't be compressed.
solids cannot be compressed at all, if you compress a liquid enough it will become a solid by freezing, gasses can be compressed however if compressed enough it will become a liquid
A solid is a substance that cannot be compressed because its particles are closely packed together in a fixed arrangement. Solid substances also cannot flow, as their particles do not have the ability to move past each other easily.