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pore spaces
Grainy stones.
don't know can anybody help
That's actually impossible unless you look between the particles of matter. Particles = more than one particle.
If you mean, for example, the large space between the nucleus and the electron of an atom, one way to look at this is that there are certain forces that keep atoms, and particles, apart. However, under conditions of extreme pressure, these distance can get drastically reduced - look up some information on white dwarves and neutron stars, for more details.If you mean, for example, the large space between the nucleus and the electron of an atom, one way to look at this is that there are certain forces that keep atoms, and particles, apart. However, under conditions of extreme pressure, these distance can get drastically reduced - look up some information on white dwarves and neutron stars, for more details.If you mean, for example, the large space between the nucleus and the electron of an atom, one way to look at this is that there are certain forces that keep atoms, and particles, apart. However, under conditions of extreme pressure, these distance can get drastically reduced - look up some information on white dwarves and neutron stars, for more details.If you mean, for example, the large space between the nucleus and the electron of an atom, one way to look at this is that there are certain forces that keep atoms, and particles, apart. However, under conditions of extreme pressure, these distance can get drastically reduced - look up some information on white dwarves and neutron stars, for more details.
Air actually contains many gases and particles. So if you have any questions ask your science taecher/instructor for help. If not, you can look in your science texbook and you may look in the table of contents and look under atmosphere and you might find the answer to your question... hope this helps-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-78% nitrogen21% Oxygen1% Other gases
simply all particles of one substance are identical means just that. all of the particles that make up a piece of matter are the same. an example of this is water. if you look at water under a microscope, you will see that all of the particles that make up the water are identical.
Look under the bike between the shocks.
Nothing. Just space. And the atoms of those gases are mostly space, for the electrons and nuclei take up little space. So what we consider matter is mostly space...
You can use the particle theory to help explain what happens when solutes dissolve. The particle theory states that there are spaces between all particles. This means that, in a sample of water, there are many water particles, but also many empty spaces. When you look at sugar. The sugar dissolves, the sugar particles separate and mix with the water particles.
Salt look like little cristals particles.
In a gas particles are spread out so much that they are independent. The particles move fast.