The thermal expansion of solids is much lower compared to liquids and gases; the bonding forces between particles are stronger.
So we can eat solid jell-o!!! And so our food stays edible!
As you change the size of an object, its density remains constant, assuming the mass stays the same. Density is a measure of how much mass is present in a given volume, so as the size changes, the mass and volume change proportionally, keeping the density the same.
It actually does. Since it is made of cheese, the man on the moon uses it as his main source for food. So despite growing in size, it stays about the same since it gets eaten away
As the ice cube is solid , the particles are tightly packed together but as it melts it changes to a liquid so the particles change so that they are like particles in a liquid. the mass is conserved ( stays the same)
That depends. If the two different silver masses contain different impurities, then the answer is yes, but it would very only slightly so as to be almost negligible. In general, any two or more objects that are made up of the same substance have the exact same density. The size of the sample is not a factor of its density (assuming the size increase is not due to heat), since density = mass/volume.
In an isotonic solution, the concentration of solutes inside and outside the cell is the same, so there is no net movement of water. This results in the cell maintaining its normal shape and size.
The control remains the same in an experiment so that you have something to compare the outcome to.
It's not a French name so it stays the same.
Hampshire isn't a French name, so it stays the same.
Yes. It stays in the same place, but it sways. So that means it moves.
1 gram of cream would be about the size of a small pea. Cream is a semi-solid substance, so it may appear slightly less compact than a solid object of the same weight.
There is no special Irish Gaelic form of Ella, so it stays the same.