No, because it is not compund substance
water is compressible
the air will be in liquid state when its pressure is increased and its temparature is decreased. eg: CNG is highly compressible gas.
Oil transmits power readily because it is minimally compressible, Lubrication abilities and the cooling properties.
You want a liquid that is not compressible so polar compounds are preferres. For safety, the nontoxic and highly stable silicones are used. They have low vapor pressures and high boiling points so they remain liquid and are quite noncompressible. This type of thermostat is filled with Alcohol, which responds well to changes in airconditioned space.
Not a hydrologist, but I'd lay money on the fact that steam is mostly air, and ice is mostly water.
No, it is a liquid.
Fluids include liquids and gasses. Liquids are not compressible. Gasses are compressible. Water is a liquid and it not compressible.
Co2
Solid and liquid states are not compressible.Solids.Solids
Gas is compressible and will expand to fill any container it is put in. Liquid is not compressible and will maintain a fixed volume regardless of the container it is in.
A liquid is the type of matter which has the form of the container and is very low compressible.
Mercury, aka: "Quick Silver"
Compressible, Low Viscosity (compared to a liquid)
liquid
water is compressible
It depends on the element or compound that you are working with. Try wikipedia.
Actually, oil can be slightly compressible. As an oil field is produced and the pressure declines, the oil within the oil deposit will expand. Most liquids, like water, are slightly compressible. This is an important property in the evaluation of oil fields and well testing. See link.