A liquid
Solids: Atoms are not free to move about; they vibrate about their fixed positions Liquids: The particles are free to move about by sliding over each other Gases: The particles more about randomly at high speeds
Chemical reactions are described based on observations. It may be in terms of changes in color, state of matter, or density.
Yes. Matter and energy are science, and there is matter all around us, except for where there are vacuums. Light can pass through vacuums, and light is a form of energy. So there's more science in vacuum chambers than just vacuums.
the branches of science are chemistry, biology and physics. in chemistry we learn about matter and the properties of the matter. in biology we study about the things around us. in physics we learn about the
Your head, a tree, air, milk, wool, olive oil, dirt, glass, lava, etc. Anything with mass or volume is matter.
because 12 is a number and marbles are things which is matter.* * * * *In much the same way as your thought about a marble is not matter - it is simply a concept in your mind. But a marble is matter.
If there are 20 red marbles and 40 blue marbles, the ratio of red to blue is 1 over 2. The number of white marbles does not matter.
A kilogram is a kilogram, no matter what.
The maximum number of marbles you have to draw is three. 1) Draw a marble. It is either white or black. 2) Draw a second marble. If it is the same colour as the first marble, we are done after two draws. 3) Otherwise, the drawn marbles have different colours. Draw a third marble. No matter what you draw next, you must have two marbles of the same colour.
If you place 3 marbles in each box then the probability is always one half or 50%. If you do not put exactly 3 marbles in each box, the probability will become less than 50%. It does not matter what colors of marbles you put in each box.
do you mean a marble that shoots BB's or can you shoot marbles out a gun. It does not matter since you can't do either of them.
If you were to roll a marble (across what doesn't matter), what slows the object down is called traction.
The idea is that energy is transferred from one point to another. A simple experiment with glass marbles is very illustrative. Put some marbles - say, 3 - in a straight row. Preferably in some kind of groove, so that they don't escape to the sides. Make a 4th. marble knock into the row of marbles from behind. The new marble stays right behind the last marble, but the first marble in the row gets away! Quite simply, the impulse was transferred from each marble to the next - the marbles themselves remained in place. Well, the ones in the middle at any rate.
We don't know what size marbles you have, so we can't tell you their volume.But we can tell you that you had better get the same answer no matter whatmethod you use, otherwise something is definitely fishy. The answer never dependson what method you use to find it.
A liquid matter is matter which particles are sliding along each other providing a little space from each other that lets it take the shape of its container.
Plain/gliding or sliding-All same no matter what u call it.
Yes any surfaces rubbing against each other is friction no matter what it is.