volume
hi
as ndmd
Gas will always fill any container that it is in, since it will expand to fill any available space. Liquid does not expand, it has a fixed volume, therefore depending upon how much liquid you pour into your container, the container may or may not be filled.
Of course not ! If that happened, then measuring cups and gas pumps would not work.
We usually apply the term compression to the act of squeezing a fluid to force it into a smaller volume or increase its pressure. The term applies to gases as well as fluids.
This would be a gas. A gas expands to fill the space of the container that contains it.
The amount of space anything occupies is normally called its "volume".
The amount of space that a substance or object occupies, or that is enclosed within a container.
Volume is the amount of space taken up by a substance like a container. It always does not to be an container it also can be a car or a bag .e.c.t. The amount of 3-dimensional space occupied by an object.
Volume is the amount of space taken up by a substance like a container. It always does not to be an container it also can be a car or a bag .e.c.t. The amount of 3-dimensional space occupied by an object.
Volume is the quantity of three-dimensional space enclosed by a closed surface, for example, the space that a substance (solid, liquid, gas, or plasma) or shape occupies or contains. So, The amount of space enclosed within a container is known as Volume.
There's no area
Solids and liquids take up a definite amount of space, where as a gas will fill its container.
No. A solid has a definite volume no matter what container it is placed in.
no because it
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.
Yes. A gas completely fills its container.
It is a measure of the amount of mass in a unit amount of space.
The floor load in an overseas container is the amount of load the floor is capable of holding.