Gas completely fills its container, liquid stays as a unit and fills the container with respect to gravity, and solids do not fill their containers
Only a liquid can completely fill its container. While it may seem that a gas could, gas is compressible, so even if the container seems full of a gas, more can be put in, so it is never really full.
since gas has no definite volume or shape it can be expanded or compressed, the particles will spread till they reach the walls of their container
particles in a solid vibrates amongst fixed positions particles in a liquid slips past each other because of their close proxmitiy and takes up the shape of a container particles in a gas moves freely
A type of mixture that is formed when one substance dissolves into another and fills the spaces between other kinds of molecules is called colloidal solution.
Gas fills the container because the gas expands hope i answered your question
it completely fills its container, takes the shape of its container
A gas is any substance that forms into the shape of its container (bottle, room, etc.) and completely fills said container fully and evenly. Source: university chemistry
Only a liquid can completely fill its container. While it may seem that a gas could, gas is compressible, so even if the container seems full of a gas, more can be put in, so it is never really full.
Gases
when a substance is in liquid phase
liquid because the yellow substance takes the form of the container.
A liquid has a definite volume but an indefinite shape. It takes the shape of its container.
No, only gases do and fluids only do so, when excess by volume
Yes. A gas completely fills its container.
since gas has no definite volume or shape it can be expanded or compressed, the particles will spread till they reach the walls of their container
A liquid.
since gas has no definite volume or shape it can be expanded or compressed, the particles will spread till they reach the walls of their container