everything. anything.
1 . substaces 2. mixture 3 . elements
The conditions for 'something' to be called matter are :- 1. It should have mass and volume. 2.It should have intermolecular force of attraction 3.It should be made up of particles. If these conditions are present, then 'something' can called matter.
The three rules of matter are - 1. The particles of matter have space between them known as intermolecular spaces 2. The particles of matter attract to each other which are known as the forces of intermolecular attraction . The forces that attract to same particles are known as cohesive forces and the forces which attract to different types of matter are called adhesive forces 3.The particles of matter are made up of small small particles
An element is only a chemical element, only a single type of atoms.A compound contain 2 or more atoms of different atoms.Matter can be an element, a compound or a mixture of compounds.
Put simply, matter is anything that: 1) Has mass 2) Takes up space Since water has mass and takes up space, it is classified as matter.
Energy (such as light) and space (which may contain matter, but is not made out of it).
hysrogen 2 and oxygen h o 2
1 . substaces 2. mixture 3 . elements
There is nothing in this universe that is not made out of matter. To answer this more directly, the answers are: 1. Nothing 2. Nothing 3. Nothing 4. Nothing 5. Nothing
put on makeup made up of mud&tattoos
All matter 1) has mass and 2) occupies space (has volume).
a large fat molecule is made up of 2 things. these are called glycerol and fatty acids
A rock is made of 2 or more minerals, minerals make up rocks but rocks cannot make up minerals.
- a balance - a graduated container
I have no idea what you mean by "the two things that make up matter". Perhaps if you could tell us what you believe these two things are, we could define them for you.There are a lot more than two elementary particles. The Standard Model has at least 18: quarks (six types), leptons (six types), and six bosons (photons, gluons, 2 W bosons, the Z boson, and the Higgs boson). You can quibble about whether or not some of the bosons are "matter" if you like, but even discounting all of them that's still significantly more than two, and that's not even counting hypothetical but as-yet-unobserved particles like gravitons.
The conditions for 'something' to be called matter are :- 1. It should have mass and volume. 2.It should have intermolecular force of attraction 3.It should be made up of particles. If these conditions are present, then 'something' can called matter.
The three rules of matter are - 1. The particles of matter have space between them known as intermolecular spaces 2. The particles of matter attract to each other which are known as the forces of intermolecular attraction . The forces that attract to same particles are known as cohesive forces and the forces which attract to different types of matter are called adhesive forces 3.The particles of matter are made up of small small particles