They become bigger!
Gets larger
That depends. The smallest particle in the classic physics is te atom. In the modern physics is the quark (quark is the composition of an eletron). WHAT IS THE SMALLEST PARTICLE The quark
Alpha particles are the same size as a helium nucleus and are made up of 2 protons and two neutrons. They have no electrons so an alpha particle has a +2 charge
depends on the particle, its size, it molecular bonding and how strong it van der walls forces are
IF and ONLY IF when the mass of particles are same. Large particle sizes will need high stream's velocity to carry it from one place to another,In another word If the stream velocity is slow than large particle sizes will be stationary.
Gets larger
Particle size affects solubility. When particle size is small, the surface area per unit volume is larger, thus the solubility is increased.
Particle size depends on the type of particle.
particles
The size of the particles that can be absorbed in Biology are very small sized particles.
As particle size in increases, capillarity decreases
The mass and size of an alpha particle compare with the masa and size of beta particle in the sense that the alpha particle is significantly larger in both size and mass that the beta and gamma particles. This is why it is called the alpha particle.
Particle size affects solubility. When particle size is small, the surface area per unit volume is larger, thus the solubility is increased.
Particle is not a property; a particle is a form of a material, small size.
No. The spaces between the particles in a gas are much bigger than the particles themselves. The size of a particle does not vary between the states of a substance.
In hetrogeneous reactions (where the reactants are in different states) the size of the particles of a solid may change reaction rate, since the surface is where the reaction takes place, and the surface area is increased when the particles are more finely divided. In general, the smaller the particles the faster the reaction
No, gravel has the larger particles.