they can flow
Liquids and gases both take the shape of their container. This is because the particles in liquids and gases are free to move past one another, allowing them to flow and conform to the shape of their container.
they conform to the shape of whatever they are put into.
The ability to flow and take the shape of their container is a property of liquids and gases that solids do not have. This property is known as fluidity.
Shape
No, gases and liquids are not ductile. Ductility is the property of a material to deform without breaking under tensile stress. Gases and liquids do not have a crystalline structure that allows for such deformation.
neither a liquid or a gas has a definite shape.
yes viscosity is a property of gas
Well, liquids and gases both haveno definite shapeno fixed volumehas massliquids and solidshave definite masshave definite volume
Liquids and gases share the property of changing shape in different containers. Liquids take the shape of their containers due to their ability to flow and conform to the shape of the container. Gases also fill the space of their container, taking its shape as they expand to fill the available volume.
The common denominator in solids, liquids, and gases is that they are all forms of matter. They differ in their arrangement of particles and the extent to which those particles move. Solids have tightly packed particles with little movement, liquids have particles that are more spread out with some movement, and gases have particles that are very spread out and move freely.
Gases and liquid do not share the same compressibility property. In liquids, the molecules are approximately lesser compressed, that Is why they move around freely and does not have fixed shape. While gas is the most compressible and it doesn't have a shape.
yes viscosity is a property of gas