solid
solid
When matter is heated the particles in the matter gain energy and begin to move or vibrate more depending on the state in which the matter is currently in. If the heat provided is significant enough they can change state too. Hope that was what you were looking for!
A change in volume is a change in volume - there is no difference. The question, as asked, is therefore meaningless. However if you try to compress air, its volume will decrease (because the gaseous state of matter is compressible). On the other and if you try and compress a liquid the volume will not change as the liquid state of matter is incompressible (that is why/how hydraulic machines work).
At high pressure the gas become a liquid.
Solids. Liquids and gases take the shape of the container they're in and the volume of gases changes with pressure and temperature.
solid
You can compress matter in any state because matter is mostly empty space. However, because it takes so much pressure to compress liquids and solids, they are said to be incompressible. ................. The gaseous state of matter is readily compressible.
When any state of matter is heated it expands.
I would have to say Gas.
This is the gas.
Solids and liquids are difficult compress. Gases, however, are easy; they respond to changes in temperature and volume.
Well, solids. For example, when you heat up metal is expands and when you freeze it, it contracts
i think the best state of matter is gas because it is very easy to compress and i9t is easy for heat to go through it and everything u try to do is very easy to.
There is no such thing as the most hated state.
When matter is heated the particles in the matter gain energy and begin to move or vibrate more depending on the state in which the matter is currently in. If the heat provided is significant enough they can change state too. Hope that was what you were looking for!
gas expand more than liquid and liquid expand more than solid.
Of the three states of matter the one with a variable shape and does not easliy compress is a liquid