Solids - Fixed volume and shape. Particles in a solid have a rigid structure and vibrate.
Liquids - Fixed volume but no fixed shape. Particles in a liquid can flow and have more energy than in solids.
Gases - No fixed volume and no fixed shape. Gas particles move with a lot of energy and fill the space available to them.
Three solids: Iron, Aluminium, Sodium
Three liquids: Iron, Aluminium, Sodium
Three gases: Iron, Aluminium, Sodium
There is a strong temperature dependence, though.
cup with hot tea inside is solid liquid and gas.
You'll find solids, liquids and gases everywhere in this world and even outside of it.
soap carbon kilo
Liquids come in a variety of different densities. That is why oil floats on top of water, and water floats on top of mercury.
No you can't find it there. I agree - you can find the atomic weight, but that tells you nothing about density - after helium, all gases have higher atomic weights than some solids, but the gases are far less dense.
No, gasses are far less dense that solids. Gasses are the least dense of the three common states of matter.
The forces of attractions between molecules of a solid is very great. Hence, the molecules are very densely packed (ie, very close to each other). That is why they do not posses fluidity. In liquids and gases (fluids), the molecular attraction is much less, which allows them to flow.
That would depend on the substance's phase. For solids and liquids, the relation is directly proportional, because as you fill up a beaker with water, it begins to weigh more. For gases, it is complicated because gases have a tendency to distribute themselves equally inside their containers, making volume measurements not very useful. Gases are generally quantified using the ideal gas law (PV=nRT) to find an amount of moles.
Humans are more use to engaging and thinking about solids than liquids or gases. They are easier to find because they are what we are looking for.
I think because mostly it is solids that are all around you, and what you notice the most. So you don't really pay attension to liquids or gases unless your handling them.
the solids and liquids you can find on Saturn is only gas which is around it's rings.
Solids, liquids, and gases? sorry if you are only looking for one answer but that's all I could find
Liquids come in a variety of different densities. That is why oil floats on top of water, and water floats on top of mercury.
Water is the liquid, and helium + hydrogen are the gases. To find out more type in ``saturn" in the box above.
If you mean where can one find information about the chemical properties of a substance then, a reasonable first step would be to search wikipedia. Many or most of the articles there contain references to source materials. Please see the link.
You would not find any gases in a cupboard other than what you would find in normal air. The gases you would find in normal are are: Nitrogen (78%) Oxygen (20%) Carbon Dioxide (0.03%) Rare Gases (Helium, Krypton, Argon, etc. 0.97%) And Water Vapour (varying amounts) These would be the five basic gases you would find in a cupboard.
Viscosity is a property of liquids and gases. In every day terms syrup is viscous and water isn't. Liquids with high viscosity are difficult to stir, there is resistance to movement through the liquid. A change of state from liquid to gas would cause the viscosity to reduce. Technically viscosity is a resistance to shear or tensile stresses. Viscosity can be measured for all liquids and gases. Wikipedia gives a technical description.
I don't know, I'm trying to find out that question to! LOL (laugh out loud!)By Emily Barns - 10
many animals ( dolphins, bats, insects, etc.) use sonic (sound) wave to locate positions, food,etc. By studying these animals we can find out how to use and read sonic waves and how they relate to different locations, movements, solids, liquids, gases,etc.
Hydraulic efficiency is the rate at which a hydraulic consumes gases and liquids to find different ways to make our lifestyles more efficient.