Vacuum?
Essentially any matter ( Solid, liquid or gas ) But not in a vacuum (ie in space)
Gas particles spread apart, filling all the space available.
Pressure in a glass can be reduced by either decreasing the amount of the gas in a finite space, or by increasing the volume of the finite space.
Essentially any matter ( Solid, liquid or gas ) But not in a vacuum (ie in space)
Volume is the amount of space something takes up. It doesn't matter what phase the matter is (gas, liquid, etc). The specific 3-dimensional space occupied is the volume.
Spanned Volume
volume Depends on it's pressure and temperature - see the Gas Laws
The amount of space that gas particles can take up is the size of the container, but the amount between them also is determined by the amount of space the gas takes up.
The space that a gas takes up is called its volume.
As a given mass of gas is allowed more volume, pressure decreases. volume is a measure of space, and because gas can be compressed to fit in small volumes, the increase of volume on a gas does not imply an increase in amount of gas, simply space that it is allowed to spread through.
No, a gas can fill the space of any container
If the space in which the gas is inside doesn't change, the volume of gas doesn't change
If the space in which the gas is inside doesn't change, the volume of gas doesn't change
Plasma, Gas ,Liquid ,Solid (everything that has mass, volume and occupies space) gas dont have volume but still gas is a matter
Yes, but the greater the space, the more dilute the gas will be.
A gas. It has no definite volume or shape.
because liquid have definite volume but not definite shape and gas does not have definite shape or volume but it fill space