Plasma is probably the answer you're looking for, although it is still baryonic matter, but it is not like the usual matter found on Earth.
State? Or phase? It would be a liquid phase. But its state is unknown since the state of a substance includes its pressure, temperature AND phase. Phase is a part of a state, but a state is not a phase.
Solid position is a state of matter. it is difficult to manipulate due to its structure. It has no space inside, its made entirely of specified material.
Matter is another form of energy as demonstrated in Einstein's famous e = m c^2 equation. Energy (matter) cannot be destroyed, it can only be changed into another form.In a nuclear explosion, some of the matter and some of the binding energy is converted into heat and light, but the total equivalent matter still exists.For matter in its everyday state, it may be in the form of Solid, liquid, gas, plasma.In a steady state, :-A solid is of a fixed volume, is essentially incompressible, and its shape may be changed.A liquid is also of fixed volume, can be compressed (but not easily), and it will take up the shape of its container.A Gas will expand to fill its container, and is easily compressed.A Plasma is an excited gas, and is composed of partly ionized gases.[Bose-einstein Condensate is a rather special state of matter and along with other esoteric forms of matter (fermionic condensates, and quark-gluon plasmas) are beyond this simple answer. ]
HECK NO! An optics computer is a computer running on light, but a quantum computer is a computer where most components are at a quantum-Hall state of matter (hey did you know that there are more than 15 states of matter). In other words, optic computer=light, quantum computer=weird.
then answer it now..
1st state of matter- solid 2nd state of matter- liquid 3rd state of matter- gas 4th state of matter- plasma 5th state of matter- Bose Einstein condensate 6th state of matter - fermionic condensate 7th state of matter- thought to be Fermionic condensate
ammonium is in the state of matter
No, The state of matter only affects its' concentration. No matter what state matter is in, it will always have the same mass (assuming it doesn't drip or float away). However, the state of matter can affect the area or volume of matter.
coppers state of matter is solid.
plasma is the 4th state of matter....
This state of matter is the solid.
It is in a solid state of matter.
ammonias state of matter is a liquid.
wave state and dark matter state
No. It is an element. It is in a state of matter, specifically "Solid".
what is state of matter room tempter
fixed gas state of matter