Like cars, lots of things happen: they can "bounce" off each other, they can 'smash' into pieces, or they can pass right by each other.
Gasses have atoms in them that bounce off each other and move around all over the place. Solids have atoms in them that stay put/don't move.A liquids atoms vibrate.
I Think they put lots of mirrors and shone a light and timed how long it took to bounce off each mirror with a computer.
No. By radiation waves I suppose you mean gamma rays. These are very penetrating and would not be affected by any other waves in the vicinity.
A solid has a definite shape and volume and the particles in a solid stay in the same position relative to each other. A liquid has a definite volume, but not a definite shape, and the particles in a liquid slide past and over each other. A gas has neither a definite shape nor volume but fills the entire container it is in. The particles in a gas move all around and bounce off each other and the walls of the container.
elasticity
Waves travel through each other.
Yes, Gas bounces off everything. Imagine it made of thousands of little pieces that bounce off each other and everything else
They Bounce off of each other and then they stop
repel or bounce off from one another...if it was high temperature and high presure the protons would fuse together
Like cars, lots of things happen: they can "bounce" off each other, they can 'smash' into pieces, or they can pass right by each other.
particles can collide with each other and bounce off other particles. witch proves they are there. why do you think you can see what you see.
The two colliding objects bounce off of each other, some of the momentum from one object will be transferred to the other object.
It is the second type of collision. And they may transfer momentum from one to the other.
yes
It is what radio waves bounce off of.
the gain of energy causes the molecules to vibrate and bounce off each other, causing them to become farther apart.