Unlike solids and liquids, a gas will expand to fill the space available to it.
Unlike solids, gases can expand and change volume.
- Solutions can be saturated or unsaturated. or - Solutions of solids in liquids, solids in solids, liquids in liquids (rarely used the expression gas in gas).
I think it would be Gas Liquid Solid
Intermolecular forces in gases are lower.
Unlike the particles that make up solids and liquids, gas particles have a large amount of empty space between them. The space that gas particles occupy is the gas's volume, which can change because of temperature and pressure.
solids - tightly packed and unable to move liquids- tightly packed but able move gases- spread out and able to move
mixtures can be formed by physically putting two or more substances together. Mixtures can be formed between solids and liquids, solids and solids, liquids and liquids, solids and gas, liquids and gas, gas and gas
- Solutions can be saturated or unsaturated. or - Solutions of solids in liquids, solids in solids, liquids in liquids (rarely used the expression gas in gas).
Both liquids and Solids have definite volumes
Solids changing to liquids are melting Liquids changing to solids are freezing Solids changing to gas are subliming Liquids changing to gas are boiling Gases changing to liquids are condensing.
the solids and liquids you can find on Saturn is only gas which is around it's rings.
liquids turn into gas and solids don't and gas evaporates
Gas is not dense, solids should be dense, liquids are dense, but not as much as solids.
I think it would be Gas Liquid Solid
This variation is typically small for solids and liquids but much greater for gases.
ANSWER unlike solids, both liquids and gases can change their shape to fit the container in which they are held. however, gases can also change volume unlike liquids.
Intermolecular forces in gases are lower.
Most solids and liquids expand with temperature (ice is an exception - it contracts with increased temperature) because there is more energy in the particles, and therefore they move faster and take up more space. They are not compressible, however, because the particles in solids and liquids are touching each other, and so have a specific volume, unlike gases.