By "more condensed", do you mean "denser"? If so, the answer is "usually but not always". The most famous example of a substance where the solid form is less dense than the liquid form at the same temperature is water.
A change from a more condensed to a less condensed state of matter can be referred to as a dilution if the matter in question is put into liquid. If a liquid changes to a gas it is called vaporization.
Heating or boiling will move matter to a less condensed state. The exception to the general rule is water which, in addition to expanding when heated, also becomes less dense as it freezes.
Matter causes a change in state
It is something that can be seen, touched, tasted, smelled, or observed in some way.
You change one state of matter to another by heating the matter or cooling it [aka] adding energy or removing the energy
A physical change is a change in the form of matter but not the chemical composition of it.
A chaqnge of the state of matter is allways a physical change.
gas
Solid matter is actually solid. Condensed matter is a liquid that is pressurized.
It has more density
state of matter of inner core
luiquid is the most compact state of matter
Matter causes a change in state
The change in the state of matter lead to the following being altered: - The strength of the inter-molecular forces - The positions and movements of the particles in the matter. - The kinetic energy contained by the particles. These are all I could come up with for now, feel free to add and edit!
The state of matter remain unchanged.
The change in which no new kinds of matter are formed but the size, shape or state of the matter may change is known as a physical change.
no physical change does not change matter
no physical change does not change matter
Michael P. Marder has written: 'Research methods for science' -- subject(s): Methodology, Science projects, Research 'Condensed matter physics' -- subject(s): Solid state physics, Condensed matter