Essentially ALL substances do. They just don't all do it within the narrow range
of temperatures and pressures where we're comfortable, the way water does.
But solid oxygen, liquid gold, and iron vapor are not supernatural miracles.
Atoms and people
Plasma.
properties of matter that determine how a substance reacts with other substances
Liquid water
You think probable to plasma; but today many other states of matter are recognized.
Gas is one of the three classical states of matter (the others being liquid and solid ). Near absolute zero, a substance exists as a solid. As heat .... 1000 atoms of protactinium as a gas occupy the same space as any other 1000 atoms for any given ...without any definite shape or volume that are in more or less random motion
If a substance that exists in liquid state was not in liquid state then it was in its other states of matter namely solid, gaseous.
The void (if it exists) does not, by definition, have substance. It cannot contain matter, energy, or any other form thereof. A null void is defined and described by this exact lacking.
(*There are four, or technically five states of matter, including solid, liquid, gas, and plasma, and the exotic Einstein-Bose condensates.)On the surface of Earth, the most common substance is water, which has a comparatively narrow range of temperatures separating its phases: ice below 0 degrees Celsius, water from 0 to 100 degrees Celsius, and steam above 100 degrees Celsius. Almost every substance has a 'triple point' where at the correct temperature and pressure it exists in all three states at once (solid, liquid gas). Further to that, at the 'critical point' there exists no distinct phase boundaries for a substance.
properties of matter that determine how a substance reacts with other substances
Plasma is a state of matter which exists at really high temperatures. Plasma gas is a mixture of ions, electrons and atoms. The other three states of matter are solid, liquid and gas.
Yes. Liquid water. Solid, ice. Gas, steam vapor. Because when its melting it turns into water and its still partly forzen (in ice form), and the steam vapor bcuz its so cold.
Any substance can be a liquid, solid or gas, provided it has the right amount of energy; water is the only one to naturally occur in all three states on Earth, though.
Plasma.
The amount of matter in a mineral, or any other substance, is measured as its mass.
properties of matter that determine how a substance reacts with other substances
It is unclear what you mean by "just matter." Yes, oxygen is a substance and it is made of matter, but, like any other chemical substance it has its own unique set of properties.
yes, correct. However, there are two other states of matter - plasma where the particles have enough energy that they have separated electrons from their nuclei and - superfluidity at low enough temperatures there is a state of matter that is neither a liquid nor a gas.