Yes they are, because the atoms are packed closely together
Gas is the state of matter that expands when heated and is easy to compress due to the large spaces between its particles.
Files that are already compressed, such as multimedia files like MP3 or JPEG, are typically harder to compress further because they lack redundancy and patterns that compression algorithms can take advantage of.
Because molecules of a gas are very remote from each other.
Gas is the state of matter that expands when heated and is easy to compress. When gas particles are heated, they gain more kinetic energy, causing them to move further apart from each other, which leads to expansion. Additionally, gas particles are further apart compared to solids and liquids, making them easier to compress.
compress it
You can only compress it to its existing volume (which you can't change without changing the density). The key is that a sponge isn't completely solid, it has pockets of air throughout it. Thus, you can compress those pockets of air and never change the volume of the actual solid.
No. You can compress a gas because the particles are NOT close together. If they are close together (as in a solid) it is extremely difficult to compress any further.
Solids and liquids are difficult compress. Gases, however, are easy; they respond to changes in temperature and volume.
The molecules of solid are already intact that you cannot compress them any further unless there are spaces left.
A "solid rubber bicycle" wouldn't be particularly useful, so I assume that you actually mean a comparison between a solid and an inflated bicycle tire. Answer: It depends. An inflated tire of a very high pressure will compress less than a solid tyre made out of soft rubber. OTOH a hard rubber solid tyre will compress less than a low-pressure inflatable tyre.
Yes they are, because the atoms are packed closely together
In a solid like steel, the atoms are packed as close together as possible. This being the case they can not be compressed together further so you can not compress (reduce the volume of) a solid block of steel.
Gas is the state of matter that expands when heated and is easy to compress due to the large spaces between its particles.
The molecules of a solid are the most tightly packed than those of either gas or liquid making it the hardest of the three to compress. Gas has the most space between molecules and is therefore the easiest to compress.
Files that are already compressed, such as multimedia files like MP3 or JPEG, are typically harder to compress further because they lack redundancy and patterns that compression algorithms can take advantage of.
Materials that are rigid and lack flexibility, such as solid objects like rocks or metals, are difficult to compress or force into a smaller space. Additionally, substances that are tightly packed, like dense gases or liquids, can also be challenging to compress.