Want this question answered?
milk
density
Yes, density is an intrinsic physical characteristic, specific for each material, a characteristic of matter. It's one of its properties. The density of matter is the mass of matter in a given unit of volume of that matter (It's mass per unit volume).
No, they are not
5 characteristic properties of matter are colour, density, hardness, softness, and flammability.
A semiconductor material with electrical properties essentially characteristic of ideal pure crystal. Essentially silicon or germanium crystal with no measurable impurities
A semiconductor material with electrical properties essentially characteristic of ideal pure crystal. Essentially silicon or germanium crystal with no measurable impurities
Extrinsic properties can be affected by the factors while Intrinsic is unaffected by the factors... (I'm unsure)
Yes, density is an intrinsic physical characteristic, specific for each material, a characteristic of matter. It's one of its properties. The density of matter is the mass of matter in a given unit of volume of that matter (It's mass per unit volume).
milk
density
wheat are the common properties and characteristic of light
Intrinsic features are things that are within a person or animal. These are things such as personality. An intrinsic value would be kindness or love.
This has lots of answers; some of them are: malleability chemical properties electrical properties color texture I suspect there are more because the size of something rarely changes the intrinsic properties of that something.
PROPERTIES are basic (or essential) elements or attributes, owned or possessed by something. Usually, the properties are concrete, intrinsic and objective. CHARACTERISTICS are prominent aspects, qualities or features of something. Normally these are extrinsic and subjective. For example, the characteristic of iron is that it is hard while its property is that its melting point is 1811K.
If you want actual values, you'll need to be more specific, I'm not about to list hundreds if not thousands of properties in the hopes that one of them is the one you want.It's probably more useful to discuss what the two terms mean. "Intrinsic" properties are those that are characteristic of the material itself ... it doesn't matter (within reason) how much of the material there is. Intrinsic properties are things like melting point, boiling point, color (sometimes), heat capacity, atomic/molecular mass, and so on. "Extrinsic" properties are those that depend on the "extent" of the material ... that is, how much there is of it. Mass, weight, and volume are extrinsic properties (though in some cases, dividing one extrinsic property by another can give you an intrinsic property again ... mass divided by volume yields density, an intrinsic property).
The definition of special properties are the unique features of a substance. They are commonly derived from other intrinsic and extrinsic properties.