by inflating a ballon
The property of air that a gas exhibits is that it can be compressed and it occupies space.
Anything that lives except air, light, sound.
Matter
we can say that air has mass and it occupies space by a small activity: take an inflated balloon and if we press it we can see that it is difficult to press becuse it hs mass and occupies the space avialable
Yes, a solid, liquid, gas as well as the other states of matter all occupies space. 2. But the space occupied by gases and liquids is not necessarily of fixed dimensions.
This would be a gas. A gas expands to fill the space of the container that contains it.
Yes, the sun.
The property of air that a gas exhibits is that it can be compressed and it occupies space.
10
Anything that lives except air, light, sound.
Any solid, liquid, or gas contains matter and occupies space.
yes. Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. Argon is a gas, it occupies space and has mass. Hence it is considered as matter.
No, volume can be used to measure the amount of space an object occupies, whether it is a solid, liquid, gas, or any other material. Volume is the three-dimensional space that an object or substance occupies.
The term used to indicate the space a weight of gas will occupy is called "volume." It refers to the amount of physical space that a gas occupies.
yes , because anything liquid occupies space do it is a fluid.
Gas molecules bump into each other all the time, pushing one another apart.
Gas molecules bump into each other all the time, pushing one another apart.