Because in case of liquids and gases there will be more randomness in magnetic moments so that will unable to align in one direction and will start behave as paramagnetism.
A common example is the liquid gas inside a cigarette lighter.
Xenon is a noble gas and is found in very small amounts in the Earth's atmosphere. It is extracted through fractional distillation of liquid air. Xenon is also found in trace amounts in certain minerals and meteorites.
No, not all gases can form a liquid. In order for a gas to form a liquid, it must be cooled and compressed to a temperature and pressure at which the gas molecules come close enough together to form a liquid state. This process is known as condensation.
Examples of cryogenic gases include liquid nitrogen, liquid helium, and liquid oxygen. These gases are cooled to extremely low temperatures to achieve their liquid state for various industrial, medical, and scientific applications.
No, not all halogens are gases at room temperature. Fluorine and chlorine are gases at room temperature, bromine is a liquid, and iodine is a solid.
it is not feromagnetic
In liquids by convection and by radiation in gases
Solid: Computer monitor Liquid: Water, liquid nitrogen Gas: Air (mix of many elements that are all gases)
All gases can be caused to change state to liquids. By either cooling, compression or a combination of both, any gas can be liquefied. This change is a physical change, by the way.
Gas are not liquid because it has a density of 1/10 % or 0.1% that of liquid.
Gases found are Hydrogen and helium
A common example is the liquid gas inside a cigarette lighter.
the different gases you can test for are a solid and liquid
Usually if someone says fluid they mean liquid, but technically speaking gases are fluid as well.
they are iron nickel cobalt and manganese
Xenon is a noble gas and is found in very small amounts in the Earth's atmosphere. It is extracted through fractional distillation of liquid air. Xenon is also found in trace amounts in certain minerals and meteorites.
Water.