They are tightly packed and vibrate.
The rank of states of matter from slowest to fastest movement of particles is as follows: solid, liquid, gas, plasma. In a solid, particles are tightly packed and have the least amount of movement. In a liquid, particles have more freedom to move around but are still relatively close together. In a gas, particles have the most freedom of movement and are spread out. Plasma is the fastest state of matter, with particles moving at incredibly high speeds due to the presence of free electrons and ions.
At its melting points the particles of a substance become looser and can move more freely. There is no order unlike a solids particles, however there isn't complete freedom to move everywhere unlike gases particles.
gas particles move fastly spread apart
Atoms are in a solid but as in particles it depends on the object.
Particle spacing is the closest together in solids. In liquids the spacing is close, however the particles have the freedom of movement. In gas, the particles have lots of kinetic energy, therefore they are far apart.
solid
Particles in a solid are tightly-packed, so there is no movement at all, therefore no space.
gliding movement. The particles move faster then that of a solid, but slower than that of a gas.
vibrations
They have only vibrational movement
The particles are tightly packed so they vibrate.
The movement of particles in a hard stick of butter are solid. Their not moving. While the movement of particles in a melted sick of butter are liquid. They are moving.
In solids, particles tend to stay still, and are close together
As the temperature of a solid increases, the particles within the solid gain energy and vibrate more rapidly. This increased thermal energy causes the particles to move more freely and with greater amplitude, leading to an overall increase in the movement of the particles within the solid.
No, particles in a solid can vibrate back and forth, side to side, and also rotate in fixed positions. The movement of particles in a solid is limited by their fixed positions in the structure of the solid.
the distance between the particles and the average kinetic movement of the particles.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.