Free electrons with a charge of -1
Particles in solids are closely packed in a fixed, orderly arrangement, which gives solids their definite shape and volume. In liquids, particles are still close but can move past one another, allowing liquids to take the shape of their container while maintaining a fixed volume. Gases have particles that are far apart and move freely, resulting in no fixed shape or volume as they expand to fill their container. This arrangement is determined by the balance between attractive forces and thermal energy at different temperatures.
No, in a hotter body, particles tend to move faster due to increased kinetic energy. In a cooler body, particles have less kinetic energy and move more slowly.
In a liquid, particles are closely packed together and experience intermolecular forces that hold them in a relatively fixed position, allowing them to slide past one another but not to spread apart completely. These forces create a cohesive interaction that maintains a definite volume, unlike gas particles, which are much farther apart and move freely to fill the entire container. The balance between kinetic energy and these intermolecular forces prevents the liquid particles from dispersing like gas particles.
Chromatography is the scientific technique that depends on the way that particles of ink move through paper. It is used to separate and analyze mixtures based on the differential migration rates of components through a stationary phase.
NO. Move away or go underground
Particles in a liquid, such as water molecules (water being the most common liquid that we encounter here on Earth) attract each other; they are loosely bonded together, in a way that freely shifts around to different arrangements, but which still keeps the molecules close together. With a stronger bond the water freezes to become a solid. In a gas, there is no bond, all the molecules of water vapor move freely without any attachment to any other molecules, because they are too far apart and moving too rapidly for any bond to form.
Yes, particles in a liquid do move faster than particles in a solid.Here is a list from slowest moving particles to fastest:solids (compact particles with little movement: vibrations.)liquids (lightly compact particles, which move around freely over one another.)gasses (particles are not compact and spread evenly apart as far as possible.)plasma (particle much like gas, more extreme. Plasma particles only occur at very high temperatures.)
When particles are spread out and moving rapidly, the temperature increases. This is because the kinetic energy of the particles is higher, causing more collisions and leading to an overall increase in thermal energy and temperature.
They vibrate.
In the gaseous state, particles are able to move freely and fill the entire volume of the container they are in due to their high kinetic energy and weak attractive forces between them.
Because the particles are close together <-- simple because the particles are close together and it wont move around or it wont compress so it dosent separate. its like glue it sticks together and by the way i am only 10 and i know all this ;P
Solids are the most orderly state of matter because the particles are tightly packed together in a regular, organized structure. Liquids have particles that are more loosely packed and can move around each other, while gases have particles that are more spread out and move freely.
No,they don't because when the particles in gas ovecome the force of attraction they move more freely making the particles have more energy. Solid particles are tightly packed with a strong force of attraction making them have the least amount of energy compared to the other states(liquid and gas).
They move in a swirly way
radiation air travels this way false or true?
it will move to right if you're moving it to the right it will go to the right
the only way they can move is by the water movement moving it around. It can not move by itself