Crushed (crumpled) paper occupies more space than folded paper, and better resists being compressed, because the paper material contains irregular folding against the grain, or strength of the paper. Part of the ball consists of flat surfaces and part as "columns" that resist being further crushed. The paper's relative stiffness will determine the actual difference in compression resistance.
Most of the volume of a paper "ball" is "trapped" air spaces between the crumpled folds.
A similar use of the strength of the material can be demonstrated by creasing a piece of paper into a fan consisting of multiple pleats, with a cross-section having a sawtooth shape. This pleated sheet will resist deformation (bending) to a much greater extent than the unfolded paper sheet.
Crushed paper may appear to occupy more space because the air pockets within the fiber structure have been compressed, causing the paper to fluff up. However, in terms of mass and weight, the crushed paper still retains the same amount of material as before it was crushed.
air expands whenheated
If an object takes up more space than another object, it will have a larger volume. This means the object has more capacity to hold substances or occupy a greater area.
No, the density of bread remains the same when it is crushed. Density is a property of the material itself and is not affected by changes in shape or size. So, crushing bread will not change its density.
Matter has mass and occupies space, while energy does not have mass and does not occupy space.
Space is the infinite or gigantic volume containing all the matter and radiation in the universe. Generally, two marbles cannot occupy the same position on a Chinese Checker game. The position defines a space. Each marble occupies a space. Things get more complicated when considering the dimensions of space (1, 2, 3, 4).
Liquids, solids and gasses EXPAND when heated- the particles occupy more space.
When two or more waves occupy the same space at the same time, an interference pattern is created.
air expands whenheated
Yes, a solid, liquid, gas as well as the other states of matter all occupies space. 2. But the space occupied by gases and liquids is not necessarily of fixed dimensions.
because it is light in weight there for occupy more space
Yes, it does!
True
It depends on how many coloumns or rows
Heat does not occupy space, as heat is just particles vibrating more rapidly. However, if you heat something up, it will occupy more space, due to its particles vibrating over a wider area. Light is much more complicated due to the weirdness of quantum mechanics. Light is made of photons. They're particles but not in the same way that molecules, atoms, electrons, neutrons and protons are. Light can behave like waves of energy instead of particles. Normal particles such as electrons occupy a bit of space and 2 of them cannot occupy the same space at the same time. A photon occupies the bit of space it's in, sort of, but another photon can occupy the same space at the same time. So if you have an electon-sized space you can put only one electron in it. If you have a photo-sized space you can put as many photons into it as you want.
Usually pictures of JPEG or BMP occupy more space than the GIF which occupies the low space. In JPEG and BMP there is space for the background also.
The water starts to occupy more space.
To save space ! Compressed files occupy much less space than uncompressed files, enabling you to store more data in the same space.