Molecules are, in general, farthest apart from one another in the gas phase.
gasses or plasmas (ionized gases)
... of the same substance, yes. As, in a gas the molecules are spaced farther apart and move around at greater speeds.
Gas molecules are spaced far apart from each other and randomly arranged. They move about randomly at high speeds in all directions and there are negligible forces of attraction between gas particles.
rarefactions
No, conduction works via contact between molecules - as gas molecules are more spaced out from one another, they are less likely to come into contact than molecules in liquids or solids
because the molecules are so far apart.
... of the same substance, yes. As, in a gas the molecules are spaced farther apart and move around at greater speeds.
This question doesn't really make sense, but to answer it, Molecules can be far apart but they can't. See molecules in a solid are packed tightly together. In a gas, the molecules are relatively far apart, occasionally bouncing into each other.
Mercury and Uranus are the two planets that are farthest apart.
The motion of molecules in a solid will be extremely slow. The spacing is very close to one another.THe opposite is true of gas. The molecules are extremely fast and they are spaced far apart.
The particles of helium are farthest apart in a balloon.
The two farthest apart NEIGHBORING PLANETS are Neptune and Uranus!
as a gas
a
Yes!!
Closely spaced
Vociferous
Water vapor is the least dense form of water, and the molecules are farthest apart from each other. Liquid water is the densest form of water. In ice, molecules form a crystal lattice.