A mirage or hallucination, maybe?
Matter is anything with volume and mass...if it takes up space and has mass and is composed of atoms and molecules it is matter. Radiation comes in many forms that are absorbed in electron transitions at varying rates. For example, in the lower ultraviolet range all the uv from the sun is absorbed in a thin outer layer of your skin. Radiation is a form of energy that reacts with matter, but not a form of matter in and of itself.
If that "something" you are reffering to is matter, then no, this will not be possible. It is against the very fundamentals of physics...Matter is something which has mass AND occupies space. If this were the case, that something would have mass and not occupy space.. its density would be round about infinity. A black hole is the closest to what you might be wanting to hear. It has a mass, and has a space that is no smaller than a teaspoon. Energy does not come in to this. The simple reason because it has its own quantity so we can not possibly imagine to find the *mass* and *space* of the form of energy, say heat. I hope this helped.Sincerely, Kenny.
Yes. There are several forms of energy that can be felt, or in other words, detected by our senses. For example, infrared radiation is emitted from warm objects and this can be detected by temperator receptors on our skin. Infrared radiation is due to certain wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum and would therefore be a form of energy, electromagnetic energy. The photoreceptors in our eyes are not able to detect infrared wavelengths of light.
Radiation
No, it cannot.
Light is a form of energy and energy does not occupy space.
Heat is a form of energy. It can be transmitted through space but it does not occupy space.
Not unless there are built inside each other it will cause a collision. No object in anyway, shape, or form can occupy another items space exactly.
Light is a form of energy caused by nuclear reactions from the sun.
Tornadoes cannot form in space. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.
Energy does not occupy space because it bounce from one mass to another. Energy is already part of the materia. When the energy release from one source it just occupy the space of the other object by penetration or bounce to a mass that it will absorve the energy.
All things occupy space and have weight. Gas is the most loosely-packed form of a substance and is therefore that substances least weighty form...... steam is the lightest and least dense form of water.
No, "Is felt" is not the correct form in the sentence. The correct form would be "She replied that she felt better."
It doesn't have mass or take up space. <><><><><> Light is energy, and energy is matter, according to Einstein. Besides, it has been proved that light is affected by Gravity and, in order to do that, it has to have mass. Look again at Einstein and others, such as Lorentz... The photon has no mass, or does it? True, it seems to have no mass, but that is at rest state. Multiply that by infinity to account for mass increase and time dilation due to traveling at the speed of light, and what do you get? Something that looks like a particle, having mass, traveling at the speed of light.
Properties ofGASES: usually float, they are in bottle or balloons, they are easy to compress, they expand to fill their containers & they occupy far more space than the liquids of solids from which they form.
The past participle of "felt" is "felt." It remains the same in both its base form and past participle form.
No, it would not. Wedging cannot occur if the solid form (ice) didn't occupy a greater volume than the liquid form.