Really simple answer: functionality. What I mean is that somethings are only useful in one state for each task. Take gasoline it doesnot combust in its liquid state. So you have to let it depressureize into a gas to make your car work.
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∙ 15y agoChanges of states of matter are used in various applications, such as in cooking to transform food, in industrial processes like distillation and freezing, in refrigeration systems to cool products, in pharmaceuticals to make drugs, and in weather patterns to understand precipitation and cloud formation. Understanding and manipulating these changes allows us to control and create new materials, products, and technologies.
A person who studies changes in matter is called a chemist. Chemists investigate how matter changes at the molecular level, including processes like chemical reactions and phase changes. They use principles of chemistry to understand, analyze, and manipulate matter.
"The" two changes are wrong. There are lots of different states of matter, and therefore many different possible transitions. The most commonly studied states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas; each of them can change directly to each of the others, for a total of 6 types of change.
Matter undergoes changes due to interactions between its particles, such as collisions, chemical reactions, or changes in temperature, pressure, or energy levels. These interactions can cause rearrangement of the particles or changes in their properties, leading to physical or chemical changes in the matter.
Changes in the state of matter are physical because they involve a change in the physical properties of a substance, such as its shape, volume, or density, without altering its chemical composition. Examples include melting, freezing, evaporation, and condensation.
Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. It is composed of tiny particles called atoms. Matter exists in various states, including solid, liquid, and gas, and can undergo physical and chemical changes.
chemical change
No, the weight of an object does not change when it changes states of matter because weight is determined by the gravitational force acting on the object, which remains constant regardless of its state of matter.
Yes, matter can change states after a physical change. Physical changes involve changes in the arrangement of particles without altering the chemical composition. For example, melting ice (solid to liquid) and boiling water (liquid to gas) are physical changes that involve changes in state.
There are different processes involved during changes in states of matter. The most common ones include melting, evaporation, condensation and freezing.
True
well both states of matter are changed/ has changed
A solid is a state of matter that does not change in volume because the particles are closely packed together and have fixed positions.
Man uses various states of matter. Liquid as water, Solid as food, Gas as oxygen etc.
I really dont know lol
A person who studies changes in matter is called a chemist. Chemists investigate how matter changes at the molecular level, including processes like chemical reactions and phase changes. They use principles of chemistry to understand, analyze, and manipulate matter.
When thermal energy is added or removed, the state of matter changes to another eg. solid becomes liquid and liquid becomes gas.
"The" two changes are wrong. There are lots of different states of matter, and therefore many different possible transitions. The most commonly studied states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas; each of them can change directly to each of the others, for a total of 6 types of change.