compressibility
No. magnesium is an element. It is not a property
Gases change their volume according to the container that they are in. Liquids change shape but not volume, and solids change neither shape nor volume.
The volume of gases decreases with temperature; extrapolating the volume/temperature relationship, it looked as if all gases would reach a volume of zero at approximately the same temperature, about minus 273 degrees centigrade.
Many gases are filled in cylinders and include nitrogen, Carbon Dioxide, Helium, Hydrogen, Argon, Acetylene etc. Small cylinders that are extremely portable include butane etc.
there is a property called convection which applies to liquids and gases. that property says colder liquids or gases are denser.
shape and volume
water. :)
Both gases and liquids have an indefinite shape - they will take the shape of the container they are held in. The difference between gases and liquids is that liquids have a definite volume while a gas does not.
The value of property is what someone who is at arm's length will pay to acquire the property. Different buyers have different views as to the true value so there is no one price.
Solids have a definite volume and gases have a variable volume
Gases are compressible so the actual volume is not possible to determine. Except if it is not compressed at all then it is 250ml.
This is possible because gases have the physical property of elasticity, due to the fact that there are relatively large spaces between the molecules of gases.
an example of how the property of compreesibility of gases is used in everyday life is when using a hand pump to fill a bicycle tire. Rapidily pushing in the plunger of the pump forces the air into a smaller volume. that ur answer. got it.
this doesn't make any sense
A gas does not have a definite shape or volume.
It is atoms
it increases the volume of the gases