I'm unable to see or analyze images directly. However, if you describe the substances or provide their names, I can help identify their physical states based on that information. Common states of matter include solid, liquid, gas, and plasma, and their characteristics can help determine which state they are in.
A physical description of a substance includes properties such as color, odor, texture, state (solid, liquid, gas), density, and melting or boiling point. These characteristics help identify and differentiate substances from one another.
Physical changes are identifiable through alterations in an object's shape, size, color, state of matter, or texture without changing its chemical makeup. These changes are typically reversible, such as melting, freezing, evaporating, condensing, or dissolving. They do not involve the formation of new substances.
Most substances change their physical state and transition from solid, to liquid, to gas when heated or cooled. This phase transition occurs due to changes in the arrangement and movement of the particles within the substance.
Physical properties are characteristics of matter that can be observed or measured without changing the substance's identity. They include attributes such as color, density, melting point, boiling point, conductivity, and state of matter (solid, liquid, gas). These properties help identify and classify different substances.
No, liquid is a state of matter, not a substance itself. Substances can exist in liquid state, but liquids can be broken down into simpler substances through physical or chemical processes.
A physical description of a substance includes properties such as color, odor, texture, state (solid, liquid, gas), density, and melting or boiling point. These characteristics help identify and differentiate substances from one another.
solids
It depends on the substance and the physical state of the substance.
Change of state is a property that involves the substances of chemical and physical changes
Yes
The kinds of changes in substances that are always physical changes are changes in the state. This is the change from solid, to liquid and then to gas and the reverse.
Physical changes are identifiable through alterations in an object's shape, size, color, state of matter, or texture without changing its chemical makeup. These changes are typically reversible, such as melting, freezing, evaporating, condensing, or dissolving. They do not involve the formation of new substances.
Most substances change their physical state and transition from solid, to liquid, to gas when heated or cooled. This phase transition occurs due to changes in the arrangement and movement of the particles within the substance.
Physical properties are characteristics of matter that can be observed or measured without changing the substance's identity. They include attributes such as color, density, melting point, boiling point, conductivity, and state of matter (solid, liquid, gas). These properties help identify and classify different substances.
State changes are physical changes because they involve a change in the physical properties of a substance, such as its form or state of matter (solid, liquid, gas). No new substances are formed during a state change, making it a physical change rather than a chemical change.
At room temperature, the physical properties of substances can change. For example, some substances may melt, freeze, evaporate, or condense. These changes can affect properties like color, texture, and state of matter.
State symbols in chemical equations are used to indicate the physical state of the substances involved (solid, liquid, gas, or aqueous solution). This information is important because the physical state can affect the reaction conditions and the behavior of the substances in the reaction. Including state symbols provides a more complete and accurate representation of the chemical reaction.