No. Solid, liquid, and gas are states of matter, not energy. - - -- --- Matter (things) have energy (not things), and things can be solid, liquid, gas, or the fourth state of matter, called plasma. Most of the sun is plasma, but about 9% of it is gaseous.
No, it does not affect things that are not solid or things that can hold volume. Such as gas. etc
cool dude cool things
Sulfur is a non-metal but in its native form it is a yellow crystalline solid. I can be made into a powder as it used for things such as gun powder.
Water because It is first solid its ice then when it melts it is liquid and when it is a gas its water vapor.
Wood. A lot of things can be a solid. Think of solid not as much as an object but a state. For example water can be either gaseous (vapour), liquid (condensation) or solid (ice).
yes
glass
There are several things that makes something solid. This include having a definite shape and volume among other things.
Solid
No. Solid, liquid, and gas are states of matter, not energy. - - -- --- Matter (things) have energy (not things), and things can be solid, liquid, gas, or the fourth state of matter, called plasma. Most of the sun is plasma, but about 9% of it is gaseous.
all solid things could be measured
Three things that will remain equal, regardless of where the solid matter goes are temperature, mass and pressure.
yes
water
It's when the anwser varies from things to things
Because a solid is a material in that given state, water can be a solid without being a mineral and many other things that aren't solid at normal temp can be solid without being a mineral.