Matter can be separated through physical or chemical means. Physical methods include filtration, distillation, and chromatography, which separate substances based on their physical properties. Chemical methods involve chemical reactions to convert substances into different forms, allowing for isolation of specific components.
Physical properties like density can be used to separate the parts of a salad. For example, using a centrifuge can separate liquid dressing from the solid ingredients based on their different densities. Another method could involve sieving to separate larger pieces of vegetables from smaller ones based on their size.
That is called a plasma. A plasma is usually considered a separate state of matter, i.e., you might say that it is no longer a gas.That is called a plasma. A plasma is usually considered a separate state of matter, i.e., you might say that it is no longer a gas.That is called a plasma. A plasma is usually considered a separate state of matter, i.e., you might say that it is no longer a gas.That is called a plasma. A plasma is usually considered a separate state of matter, i.e., you might say that it is no longer a gas.
substance
Mixtures are composed of two or more different types of matter that are physically combined, but not chemically bonded. To identify a mixture from a list of different types of matter, look for physical properties like different colors, textures, or states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) that indicate separate substances are present. Additionally, mixtures can often be separated using physical methods like filtration, distillation, or chromatography.
SimplificationUntil we get a better answer, we have:Atomic theory - discrete atoms composed of electrons/protons/neutrons and other particles (separate bits).Quantum/quark - discrete quarks.String theory - discrete strings.Original reply...This is a theoretical physics question, but my understanding is that the theory accepted now is that matter is composed of tiny strings of sub-particle size. So the separate bits theory is the right one. But I don't think anyone really knows, which is why bigger and bigger machines are built to try to find out. See the link below to String Theory.The above deals with the sub-particle area of matter, we can also consider how particles are arranged, these are clearly separate bits. Matter is essentially what makes up everything in nown existence. Matter is (at the basic level) made up of all the elements on the periodic table of elements.The periodic table is arranged into columns from 1 upto 8. group 8 elements are not very reactive and do not usually react very much, however all other elements will mix together. when this happens (infact even when you have a pure element on its own) a structure known as a lattice forms.When i say lattice, think of a hollow cube made out of straws. now imagine that at each corner of that cube there is a blob of plasticine. The straws represent the chemical bonds, which hold the particles (atoms) together and the atoms are represented by the blobs of plasticine.(Depending upon the elements in the bond) some bonds will be very hard and wont be able to be bent (for example glass can not be bent for this reason) where as substances such as aluminum are more bendable because of the bond types.I am not sure how indepth i should go with this (i don't want to preempt teaching) however if you are interested, Google the followingIonic bondsCovalent bondsMetalic bonds
it of a matter or salad of the part separate
I suggest electromagnetic radiation. There is anti-matter, but this is really another form of matter, and I guess you want something entirely separate from matter.
Generally, no. Unless the matter can be negotiated between the parties.
Gotem
Atom is the smallest unit of matter which combines to form elements, compounds and mixtures.
It does not matter. The straw will decompose into compost as well as the manure.
The matter goes into the air as separate atoms. You cannot see atoms because they are extremely tiny.
If you both qualify for one then you can it does not matter if you separate ...
No, a solid is a solid and a gas is a gas. They are two separate states of matter.
This model represents matter and its component particles as separate little balls or particles of matter. A useful enough model where chemical and nuclear inter-reactions may be ignored.
Chocolate chip ice cream. You can separate the chips from ice cream. (:
Through paper chromatography