Antartica, you will find ice, water, and vapor, steam from wamer ocean waerts vaporizig as fog
A kitchen! The pot is the solid, the water inside the pot is a liquid, and the water in the pot that gets evaporated is the gas.
If you are referring to a tropical rain forest, you won't find ice so that leaves liquid and vapor. There are temperate rain forests where you can find solid, (snow & ice) liquid and vapor.
there are only three, and they are the most common for any substance rarely ever will you see plasma, anyways they are solid (ice) liquid (water) and gas (water vapor)
Definitely. Example from a chemistry problem: Find mass of the water in this equation.....___Well of course! Mass being the amount of mater in an object, there will always be matter in some liquid.
Water is denser in its liquid phase than its solid phase. It is at its densest just a couple of degrees above freezing, and it expands just a bit as it freezes. That's why ice floats, and why freezing water can be so destructive.
I came here to find the same answer >.< .... Science is hard!!! lol
Go to the bank of any river. The air is the gas, the water the liquid and the dirt on the bank is the solid.
water equals liquid , water vapor equals gas and ice equals solid
solid
In most western homes you can find all three, solid, liquid and vapour.
the 3 states of matter are solid, liquid and gas.
yes you can see the ripples in the water but I am not sure about gas as for the solid you can see it vibrate
It depends on the temp of the classroom. For eg in North Pole water would in solid form but in Africa water will be in liquid form. So it depens on the atmosphere u are in.
In our usual experience, we only find water in all three phases, as solid, liquid, and gas. But almost any substance can exist in those phases, given the right temperature and pressure.
A measuring cup or graduated cylinderWater or other liquid to place the solid in
Fill the can with a liquid to the top so it almost overflows. Put the solid in the can and catch the overflowing liquid. Measure the liquid. The measurement of the liquid will give you the volumn of the solid.
I notice that most of the answers ignored the fact that you are working with a solid that is soluble in water. Measuring the displacement in water will be incorrect as some of the volume will dissolve. First make a saturated solution from the solid in water. Then place the object in this saturated solution. Measure the displacement.
To find the volume of an irregular solid, use the water displacement method. Immerse the item fully into a filled container of water and measure the liquid that overflows. *If the material is porous or soluble, some improvisation will be necessary, such as a thin plastic coating.