Yes. Liquid water. Solid, ice. Gas, steam vapor. Because when its melting it turns into water and its still partly forzen (in ice form), and the steam vapor bcuz its so cold.
Solid, liquid, gas, or plasma. A substance can occur in any one these states. All matter occurs in one of these 4 states. These are the 4 states of matter.
Among the four known states of matter, plasma is the least found on the Earth's crust.
Solid: atoms/molecules are packed tightly together Liquid: atoms/molecules are close but looser than a solid which gives them the ability to move more. Gas: atoms/molecules are further apart from one another and have more energy letting them move around as they please. Plasma: same as gas except the atoms/molecules have a charge (positive or negative) to them.
The substance is water. Strictly speaking though, water doesn't exist anywhere on earth in a pure water form in any of the three states. As a gas and as a liquid, all the water on earth is a light carbonic acid, as it contains considerable amounts of carbon, and other chemicals, earth water has a ph of 7. all water vapour on earth is carbonic acid, or another acid or alcaline mix. Sulphur can also be found in solid, liquid, and gas form. So it seems the question is a trick! liquid sulphur drips and flows all over volcanoes... many chemicals occupy the three states in varying degrees of purity.
sir william crookes in 1879
AnswerCommonly exists in all of its different states
It exists at incredibly high temperatures not usually encountered on Earth.
Matter on Earth exists in four physical states: solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Each state has distinct properties based on the arrangement and energy of the particles that make up the matter.
Water is the only substance that can be found in all three states of matter: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor).
Water can exist in three states, liquid, vapor and as a solid. On the earth, it exists in all three states.
The three states of a substance essential for life on Earth are solid, liquid, and gas. These states determine how matter behaves and interacts with its environment, allowing for processes like nutrient absorption, transportation, and energy transfer within living organisms.
(*There are four, or technically five states of matter, including solid, liquid, gas, and plasma, and the exotic Einstein-Bose condensates.)On the surface of Earth, the most common substance is water, which has a comparatively narrow range of temperatures separating its phases: ice below 0 degrees Celsius, water from 0 to 100 degrees Celsius, and steam above 100 degrees Celsius. Almost every substance has a 'triple point' where at the correct temperature and pressure it exists in all three states at once (solid, liquid gas). Further to that, at the 'critical point' there exists no distinct phase boundaries for a substance.
Most matter on Earth exists as solid, in the form of rocks, minerals, soil, and liquids like water, and gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
No. There is nothing like living matter. Matter does not live. But life also does not sustain or exists without matter.
water
Water can exist in three states, liquid, vapor and as a solid. On the earth, it exists in all three states.
That which occupies space and has mass is known as matter.