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may slide past each other
a liquid
The particles can slide past one another. This is because they are far apart.
assumes the shape and volume of its container particles can move past one anotherassumes the shape of the part of the container which it occupies particles can move/slide past one anotherretains a fixed volume and shape rigid - particles locked into placecompressible lots of free space between particlesnot easily compressible little free space between particlesnot easily compressible little free space between particlesflows easily particles can move past one anotherflows easily particles can move/slide past one anotherdoes not flow easily rigid - particles cannot move/slide past one another
lubricant!
may slide past each other
a liquid
Yes. They slide past one another.
Temperature is the average kinetic energy of a substance, As a substance gains kinetic energy, its particles begin to move faster. While solids vibrate in place, the particles in a liquid slip and slide past each other, and in gasses, the particles move even faster and further apart. As the kinetic energy of a substance increases, the particles collide with one another with greater force and frequency. Every time particles collide, there is friction between them. Just as your hands get warm when you rub them together, the particles begin to warm as they collide. This is why there is a direct relationship between the temperature and the kinetic energy of a substance.
They are called slides. They do not have another name.
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The particles themselves don't change, but their behavior does. If you are simply heating a solid, but not to the point of a phase change, the particles remain locked in place but they vibrate faster. If you heat a solid to the point that it goes through a phase change, the particles start to vibrate fast enough to break the intermolecular bonds and keep them broken enough to allow the particles to slide past and around one another.
That substance is called a lubricant. An example would be oil.
toboggan
Particles in a liquid move around and slide past one another. This allows the liquid to flow.
The particles can slide past one another. This is because they are far apart.
Although liquid particles are more disordered than those in solid particles, they are less disordered than those of gaseous particles. In liquids, particles slide past one another. In gases, however, particles are more spread apart and move in a random manner.