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
The kinds of matter are solid, liquid, and gas.
Which solid liquid 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.
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.
solid and liquid because gas doesn't take up space it just floats away
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.
The classical states of matter are: gas, liquid, solid and plasma; but now many other states of matter are accepted.
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.
solid to liquid: meltingliquid to gas: vaporization