The particles of a liquid move from one place to another although they are close together. Because of this, a liquid changes shape depending on the container they are put in. It does not have a fixed shape. The volume of a liquid is fixed; it can be measured.
Solid : The particles are held together and arranged in a regular pattern. They cannot move from one place to another but only vibrate at their own positions. The spaces between them are very little. Liquid : The particles are close together but they can move from one place to another. The spaces between them are little. Gas : The particles are far apart and move freely in all directions.
Ice has particles moving the slowest among the three forms of water (solid, liquid, and gas). In the solid state, water molecules are held closely together in a rigid structure, causing them to vibrate in place rather than move freely. This results in slower particle movement compared to liquid water, where molecules are able to move past each other more easily.
The molecules of a gas have mass, so there's naturally the force of gravitational attraction between them. But that force is so small that it's entirely negligible in describing the behavior of a gas, and the answer to your question is "virtually no".
They are not! the atoms of any liquid are held so tight that can can just slide over each other. infact you cannot compress them simply because the force of repulsion between the atoms will not allow them to come more closer. take a situation , if you pressurise a liquid with a piston, what will happen? do it of your own u'll get to know if they are compressible or not. and if they had to be y should we be using pipelines to transport oil, we should have compressed forms in a container and should have transported them in that way.. it should have saved our money as well!
bonds
No, gas particles are not held more tightly than liquid particles. In a gas, particles have more kinetic energy and are free to move around more compared to the relatively closer and more ordered arrangement of particles in a liquid.
Insolubles particles form a suspension.
In a liquid, particles are held together by intermolecular forces such as Van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonds. These forces allow the particles to move past each other, giving liquids the ability to flow and take the shape of their container.
they are not held together.
Gas? (:
Liquid and gas are caused by the kinetic energy of the particles within a substance. In a liquid, the particles have enough energy to move past each other but are still held together by intermolecular forces. In a gas, the particles have even more energy and move freely, with very weak intermolecular forces.
No, the particles in a liquid are not held rigidly in place. If they were held rigidly in place, that substance would no longer be a liquid but instead be a solid. A liquid, by definition, has particles that are free to move around each while still being held together by intermolecular or interatomic forces. This is what allows liquids to freely move around and to fill up whatever container they are poured into.
The particles of a liquid are held together by intermolecular forces, which create cohesive interactions between them. These forces are strong enough to keep the particles close together, allowing them to maintain a definite volume. However, unlike solids, the particles in a liquid can move freely, enabling them to flow and take the shape of their container without expanding to fill it completely. This balance between mobility and cohesion is what prevents the liquid from dispersing entirely.
The particles of a liquid move from one place to another although they are close together. Because of this, a liquid changes shape depending on the container they are put in. It does not have a fixed shape. The volume of a liquid is fixed; it can be measured.
First, the molecules in a liquid are held together by molecular bonds.. The particles move somewhere between the state of a solid (very rigid and ordered.. no movement) and a gas (no arrangement, spread out, fast moving).. See that liquid particles move and are only locally bound to one another.. The hotter they are, the faster they move.
by vibrating inside of the container that the liquid is held inside in