Want this question answered?
molecules move more in gasses gasses>liquids>solids
The kinetic energy in liquids is greater than that in solids because the molecules in solids are more closely packed together than in liquids such that liquids can freely move about within the containing vessel.
Liquids are easier to move around more.
No. First of all, liquids are not gasses. Liquids and gasses are two different states of matter. Second, you can have any mass of liquid or any mass of gas. Third, liquids are denser than gasses, meaning they have more mass for a given unit of volume.
Most solids and liquids expand with temperature (ice is an exception - it contracts with increased temperature) because there is more energy in the particles, and therefore they move faster and take up more space. They are not compressible, however, because the particles in solids and liquids are touching each other, and so have a specific volume, unlike gases.
molecules move more in gasses gasses>liquids>solids
The motion of particles in gasses, liquids, and solids are all different. Gas particles can move much more quickly than solids.
Sure. Think about how to ask the question so's you get a more useful answer.
sound waves travel through best through solids because they are more dense, then liquids, and finally they travel the worst through gasses.
Solids are less changed in volume by pressure than fluids (liquids or gasses or plasmas) because the atoms or molecules in solids are more closely bound by the chemical bonds that form them. JCF
Liquids, solids and gasses EXPAND when heated- the particles occupy more space.
Solids CAN be compressed but, compared to gasses, it's very difficult to tell. Solids, like liquids, are more difficult to compress than gasses because their atoms are much closer together and impart proportionally more force on each other
Solids tend to be heavier because they have more atoms in less area (density) and the reason they have more atoms in less area is because they have an atomic attraction between them that is much greater than that of gasses and liquids (liquids have no atomic attraction and gasses tend to repel themselves) Now gasses whose atoms repel against themselves are much more disperse and occupy a lot more space with a lot less mass. Solids tend to be heavier because they have more atoms in less area (density) and the reason they have more atoms in less area is because they have an atomic attraction between them that is much greater than that of gasses and liquids (liquids have no atomic attraction and gasses tend to repel themselves) Now gasses whose atoms repel against themselves are much more disperse and occupy a lot more space with a lot less mass.
Are they liquids? Are they gasses? Cookies and muffins seem pretty solid to me. Unfortunately, they seem to make me more solid as well.
On the surface, more liquids. Considering the whole Earth, much more solids than liquids
A particle is an atom which cant be seen by the naked human eye, everything is made up of: in solids; gasses and liquids. Each atom contains electrons, protons and neutrons, which is what gives each particle its properties. Solids tend to have more compact particles where as gasses have less.
Why is the moon's pull more noticeable in liquids than in solids?