No, you can have plasma and also a few other fascinating states of matter. Try researching Bose-Einstein Superfluid state of matter.
Liquid, solid, and gas are the common states of matter.
Water is a substance that can exist in all three states of matter: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor).
Heating can change matter from a solid to a liquid or from a liquid to a gas. Cooling can change matter from a gas to a liquid or from a liquid to a solid.
The [main] states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas. They usually move like this: Solid ---> Liquid ---> Gas However, matter can jump from solid to gas and vice versa, but it usually doesn't.
Freezing (Liquid 2 solid) Melting (solid 2 liquid) Boiling (liquid 2 gas) Evaporation (liquid 2 gas) Condensation (gas 2 liquid) Sublimation (solid 2 gas) hope this helped
Which solid liquid gas?
The kinds of matter are solid, liquid, and gas.
The different phase changes of matter are: melting (solid to liquid), freezing (liquid to solid), vaporization (liquid to gas), condensation (gas to liquid), sublimation (solid to gas), and deposition (gas to solid).
There are 3 basic states of matter Solid Liquid Gas
liquid, gas, solid, and plasma
Solid, liquid, and gas.
solid and liquid because gas doesn't take up space it just floats away
As we all know d 3 forms of matter,Solid Liquid and Gas,the difference between these 3 is the distance between the molecules of matter, the order of dist between these states is as below solid<liquid<gas.
The states of matter are solid, liquid and gas. A solid melts to become liquid and a liquid evaporates to become gas. Sublimation is the direct change from solid to gas.
There are three basic states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas. The number of combinations possible from these states is 3! (3 factorial), which equals 6. The six possible combinations are solid-liquid-gas, solid-gas-liquid, liquid-solid-gas, liquid-gas-solid, gas-solid-liquid, and gas-liquid-solid.
The classical states of matter are: gas, liquid, solid and plasma; but now many other states of matter are accepted.
solid to liquid: meltingliquid to gas: vaporization