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Liquids and gases share the property of changing shape in different containers. Liquids take the shape of their containers due to their ability to flow and conform to the shape of the container. Gases also fill the space of their container, taking its shape as they expand to fill the available volume.
Gases do that.
The two states of matter that take the shape of their container are gases and liquids. Gases have no fixed shape or volume and will expand to fill any container, while liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container.
Liquids and gases can take the shape of their containers because their particles are free to move and flow. In contrast, the particles in solids are tightly packed and can only vibrate in place, preventing them from taking the shape of their container.
Yes, gases expand or contract to fill the volume and shape of their containers.
they take the form of their containers
The two states of matter that are considered fluids are liquids and gases. Both have the ability to flow and change shape to fit their containers.
Both liquids and gases are considered fluids because they can flow and take the shape of their containers. Liquids have a definite volume but not a definite shape, whereas gases have neither a definite shape nor volume as they expand to fill the container they are in.
They are both made of matter, their particles both vibrate, they flow easily, and can both assume the shape of their containers.
Solids have a definite shape and volume. Liquids have a definite volume, but no definite shape - they take the shape of their container. Gases have no definite volume and no definite shape - they expand to fill their entire container.
they take the form of their containers
Superfluidity