it goes by the kind of car you use a t what brand gas was always used in it when u bought it. if you are buying a brand new car then u start it off of what kind of gas will be used and being that gas is a liquid it just flows in any kind of car hole because all cars have whole openings for gas.
Personally I don't think the above person understood the question...
A gas is able to fill a container because it has no fixed volume or shape, therefore using diffusion to fill the empty spaces; now you have a container full of a gas.
Yes, liquids can fill containers as long as the container can hold the volume of the liquid. The shape and size of the container will determine how the liquid fills it. Liquids will take the shape of the container they are poured into.
Gases can take the shape and size of any container because they have particles with high kinetic energy that move freely and independently. This allows them to fill and conform to the shape of their container.
Gas spreads out to fill any type of container
No, a gas expands to fill the container it is in.
Matter in the liquid state can take the shape of a container. However, a liquid has a definite volume. On the other hand, a gas can do both, that is take the shape and volume or size of a container.
Yes, liquids can fill containers as long as the container can hold the volume of the liquid. The shape and size of the container will determine how the liquid fills it. Liquids will take the shape of the container they are poured into.
Gases can take the shape and size of any container because they have particles with high kinetic energy that move freely and independently. This allows them to fill and conform to the shape of their container.
Gas not liquid because you may have too much liquid
A liquid state will fit into a container of any shape and size, as it takes the shape of its container.
Gas spreads out to fill any type of container
Gas particles move freely and independently, allowing them to evenly distribute and fill any available space within a container, regardless of its shape or size. This behavior is described by the kinetic molecular theory, which explains that gas molecules have high energy and random motion, enabling them to spread out to occupy the entire volume of the container.
The shape of the gas is determined by the shape of the container (assuming that there is enough gas to fill the container). The volume of the gas is determined by the volume of the container (again assuming that there is enough gas present to fill the container.). When a gas is introduced into any container, it will assume the size and shape of the container if the container is filled. The exception to this rule might be if the pressure of the gas introduced is great enough to influence the shape of the container (i.e. blowing up a balloon).
A gas has no definite shape and will fill any container it's in.
The shape of the containerA property of a gas is that it expands to fill the shape and volume of a container. An exception may be the case where there is more than one gas and the heavier gasses will tend to settle to the bottom of the container.
Gases have molecules that can spread far apart to fill any shape or container. The particles in a gas are in constant random motion, allowing them to quickly fill the available space.
No. It expands to fill any container it's in. If you pump it out of one container and into a different one, it changes its shape to match the new container.
No, a gas can fill the space of any container