A material with a given volume and form.
-verb (used without object)10.Chemistry . to volatilize from the solid state to a gas, and then condense again as a solid without passing through the liquid state.
Stephen R. Byrn has written: 'Solid state chemistry of drugs' -- subject(s): Pharmaceutical chemistry, Solid state chemistry
a mechanically separate, homogeneous part of a heterogeneous system or the solid, liquid, and gaseous phases of a system.
It depends on what you mean. If you mean "more likely to fail chemistry and physics than to fail mathematics", then the answer is presumably yes. If you mean "more likely to fail chemistry and physics than some bozo who can't figure out how this 'multiplication' thing works", then no. In physics and (most kinds of) chemistry, a solid understanding of mathematics can only be helpful.
Norman Bruce Hannay has written: 'Treatise on solid state chemistry' -- subject(s): Solid state chemistry
solid, liquid, gas
yes
every material which has a definite shape and definite volume is solid.
It is the take up of a gas by a solid or liquid or the take up of a liquid by a solid.
paper
J. Arvid Hedvall has written: 'Solid state chemistry' -- subject(s): Crystallography, Solid state chemistry 'Skolpojke i sekelskiftets Skara'
Chemistry.