Water is a chemical solution. It is composed of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom in molecules. Unless it has been extensively filtered and treated (such as the distilled water used in some lab experiments), water almost always has other gasses, liquids and solids dissolved into it. It is nearly impossible to keep water 100% pure. Therefore, it is usually considered to be the "universal solvent". This means that you can dissolve or at least suspend almost anything in water.
Yes, water ice and water vapor are the same types of matter. Its only the state of matter that is different. Water ice is solid and water vapor is gas.
CLASSIFICATION. Sympathomimetic.
The density of the solid.
Water molecules bunch together in the state of a solid.
Most substances can exist in any of the three states of matter, depending on their temperature. Water if the perfect example: water, steam, and ice.
6classification of matter
Domain
This is a gel.
Depends on what you want to use the classification for. One traditional classification was to classify matter into gas, solid, liquid, plasma, to which must be added today, Bose-Einstein condensate. Another classification would be animal, vegetable, mineral and abstract.
Depends on what you want to use the classification for. One traditional classification was to classify matter into gas, solid, liquid, plasma, to which must be added today, Bose-Einstein condensate. Another classification would be animal, vegetable, mineral and abstract.
dissolved organic matter and inorganic matter
It is matter in a fluid state and a solution.
Depends on what you want to use the classification for. One traditional classification was to classify matter into gas, solid, liquid, plasma, to which must be added today, Bose-Einstein condensate. Another classification would be animal, vegetable, mineral and abstract.
Aristotle classified matter as either plants or animals. The main weaknesses in his classification was the fact it did not factor in specific species and was a general classification.
substanceelementcompoundsmixturesolutioncoarse mixture
pure substances and mixtures
extensive or intensive