Yes. There is a huge amount of space between electrons and the nucleus of atoms, therefore all matter can be condensed under pressure. Dense metals like lead will not want to compress very easily, so it would take extremely high pressure to compress it.
Gases are the only state of matter that can expand to fill the entire volume of a container, regardless of its size or shape. This is because gas particles have a lot of kinetic energy and are far apart from each other, allowing them to move freely and fill the available space.
No. All forms of matter are compressible if you use sufficient pressure. Gases are the most easily compressible, but liquids are also compressible if you use high enough pressures. So are solids, believe it or not.
No it is a type of gas and gas is a state of matter. No element has only one matter. Like H20 its solid form is ice, its liquid form is water we drink, and its gas form is heated water.
Anti- Matter
Gases have the property of indefinite shape and volume, as they expand to fill any container. They also have low density compared to liquids and solids. Gases can be compressed and expand easily when heated.
Gases are the only state of matter that can be compressed.
5 properties of gases are: Gases have the lowest density of all the normal 3 states of matter. Gases have a random arrangement. Gases are the only normal state of matter to be compressed. Gases have the weakest atomic forces between particles. Gases, if stripped of their electrons, form plasmas.
Gases are the only state of matter that can expand to fill the entire volume of a container, regardless of its size or shape. This is because gas particles have a lot of kinetic energy and are far apart from each other, allowing them to move freely and fill the available space.
No. All forms of matter are compressible if you use sufficient pressure. Gases are the most easily compressible, but liquids are also compressible if you use high enough pressures. So are solids, believe it or not.
Nobody can say for sure, but there was MATTER present- what that matter was we can only hypothesise about, but it probably consisted of a variety of gases, elements, 'dark matter' and movement energy. The theory is that all of these things were compressed into such a tiny lump that they caused the massive explosion that created the Universe. As to what was there before the matter was present, no physicist or cosmologist can explain, but the answer can really only be that it was God.
Depends on what the gas is. Compressed air is used by Scuba divers to breathe, auto mechanics to drive lots of theirtools, carpenters for air powered nailers. Compressed oxygen is usedto help people with breathing problems in or out of the hospital,withacetylene in oxy-acetylene torches to cut thru metals. Maybe you mean CNG, compressed natural gas, which is mostly methane, and is used as a fuel.
No. It's still regular matter, only enormously compressed.
If you mean compressed, then the answer is a gas.
There are no multiple gases. There is only one and that is ozone gas.
No, light is not considered matter in the traditional sense. It consists of particles called photons, which are massless and do not have a fixed position in space. While light exhibits characteristics of both waves and particles, it is classified more as a form of energy rather than matter.
No it is a type of gas and gas is a state of matter. No element has only one matter. Like H20 its solid form is ice, its liquid form is water we drink, and its gas form is heated water.
Solids typically expand the least when heated compared to liquids and gases. The molecules in a solid are already closely packed together, so there is less room for them to move around and increase in volume when heated.