C.Gas
Gases, such as those found in the atmosphere, have particles (atoms or molecules) that are far apart from each other but are electrically neutral. Due to their distance and random motion, there is limited interaction between gas particles in comparison to solids or liquids.
Gas
If the particles of matter that make up a substance are relatively far apart and can move freely, the substance is likely in a gaseous state. Gas particles have a lot of space between them and move independently of one another.
This is a gas.
When a substance expands, the particles themselves do not get bigger. Instead, they move further apart from each other, creating more space between them, which leads to the expansion of the substance.
The distance between particles increases as a substance changes from a liquid to a gas. In the gas phase, particles are spread far apart and move freely, leading to higher distances between them compared to the closer arrangement in the liquid phase.
Neither. No substance on its own on is an ion. Nitric acid is electrically neutral. When dissolved in water, nitric acid breaks apart, releasing both positive hydronium ions and negative nitrate ions.
If the particles of matter that make up a substance are relatively far apart and can move freely, the substance is likely in a gaseous state. Gas particles have a lot of space between them and move independently of one another.
This is a gas.
The particles spread apart, making the substance less dense. The particles also spread apart to fill more space. Also, the movement of said particles become more active.
Its particles move farther apart and the substance becomes a liquid.
the particles in the substance begin moving rapidly and move further apart
This is a gas.
The gas phase is when particles are furthest apart because they have enough kinetic energy to overcome intermolecular forces and move freely in all directions.
cavitation?
Sol.
When a substance expands, the particles themselves do not get bigger. Instead, they move further apart from each other, creating more space between them, which leads to the expansion of the substance.
When a substance expands, the particles within it move further apart from each other, increasing the volume it occupies. This expansion is due to an increase in the kinetic energy of the particles, causing them to move faster and spread out. The substance typically undergoes a physical change rather than a chemical one.
When a substance undergoes thermal expansion, its particles gain energy and move farther apart, causing the substance to increase in volume. This increase in volume is due to the increased average kinetic energy of the particles, leading to the substance taking up more space.