The Volume of Plasma actually depends on the amount of Plasma given to an object. That's because Plasma can't be usually measured. For example, a sunlight and electricity. They can't be very much measured but you can measure how much it came in a certain type of object. So, in the other hand, there is no shape to Plasma because a Plasma is always moving and it doesn't have a specific shape to it.
Plasma has no definite shape or volume and conducts electric currents.a gas
It can change shape and volume
When its enclosed in a container.
Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter (with solid, liquid and plasma being the other states). It has the distinction of taking both the shape and the volume of the container that it is in. If you want to include plasma, that too will expand - acting like a gas. So will supercritical fluids which might be considered gases by some definitions, but not by others..
That is called a plasma. It only exists at high temperatures in the thousands of degrees, otherwise the positively and negatively charged particles will combine to form electrically neutral compounds of some sort.
Plasma has no definite shape or volume and conducts electric currents.a gas
no
Plasma is made up of free electrons and atoms that are stripped of their electrons. It has no definite shape or volume. A Solid has a definite shape and a definite volume. A Liquid has no definite shape but has a definite volume. A Gas has no definite shape or volume.
Like gas, plasma does not have a definite shape or a definite volume.
When its enclosed in a container.
Plasma
It can change shape and volume
Plasma has no definite shape or volume and conducts electric currents.a gas
There are two states that have no definite shape and volume. Gas and Plasma.
There are two states of matter that has no definite volume or shape. They are a gas and plasma. Solid matter has a definite shape and volume.
Plasma
Because it is in liquid state.