gases are highly compressible as there molecules have lots of spaces between them while in molecules of solids there is not much space and they are tightly packed .
Solids are rigid and incompressible. Liquids have fixed volume but match their container. Gases completely fill their container.
Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.
A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.
Gasses are compressible and liquids and solids are incompressible. Using this information one can surmise that CO2 compressible would be the gas phase of CO2 and CO2 incompressible would be the solid (dry ice) phase of CO2.
Which word do you not understand? incompressible - cannot be compressed viscous - resistant to flow, "thick" fluid - substance that flows (both gases and liquids are fluids, but gases are usually compressible; liquids generally aren't)
gases are highly compressible as there molecules have lots of spaces between them while in molecules of solids there is not much space and they are tightly packed .
Liquid: yes, more or less. Liquids are practically incompressible (with the pressures we usually have on Earth).Gases: no. Gases can easily be compressed.
gases are highly compressible as there molecules have lots of spaces between them while in molecules of solids there is not much space and they are tightly packed .
Solids are rigid and incompressible. Liquids have fixed volume but match their container. Gases completely fill their container.
Yes, solids are both dense and incompressible.
Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.Yes. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.
Yes, you can compress gases, liquids, and solids. However, liquids and solids are MUCH less compressible than gases, and for many practical purposes you can consider them "incompressible". This means that a high pressure will only cause a very small change in volume.
A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.A helium baloon. Water is incompressible, for most practical purposes.
Gases can change their volume and that causes the density to change. Liquids and solids are practically incompressible. Their volume change under pressure is such a small amount that their density changes very little if at all.
Fluids are used in Hydraulics - fluids are essentially incompressible - they transmit forces well (e.g. a car bottle lack) Gases are used in pneumatics - gases are compressible - you can therefore store energy in a pneumatic system (e.g. a car tyre)
solids