A Physical Property is a quality or condition of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the substance's composition.
eg volume, mass, density, colour.
This particle is the electron.
The molecule is the smallest particle of a compound that retains its chemical properties. A molecule consists of two or more atoms bonded together. Each molecule has a unique set of properties determined by the types of atoms present and their arrangement.
A beta particle is an electron (or positron) with high energy and speed.
The smallest particle of an element that has the properties of that element is called an atom.
a molecule
This particle is the electron.
This particle is the proton.
The smallest particle of a covalent compound that shows the properties of that compound is a molecule.
The molecule is the smallest particle of a compound that retains its chemical properties. A molecule consists of two or more atoms bonded together. Each molecule has a unique set of properties determined by the types of atoms present and their arrangement.
When a particle is observed, its properties can change because the act of observation can interact with the particle and affect its behavior. This is known as the observer effect in quantum mechanics.
A beta particle is an electron (or positron) with high energy and speed.
This particle is the proton, equal to the atomic number.
Light energy can exhibit properties of both a wave and a particle. This duality is known as wave-particle duality and is a fundamental concept in quantum mechanics. Depending on the experiment conducted, light can be observed as behaving like a wave (with properties such as interference and diffraction) or as a particle (with properties such as discrete packets of energy called photons).
it has the properties of a wave and a particle
Yes. Light has both particle and wave properties.
Particles can have electric charge, which determines how they interact with electric fields. They can also have magnetic properties, such as magnetic moment, which describes how they respond to magnetic fields. These properties are important for understanding how particles behave in different environments and in the context of particle physics.
Yes, light exhibits properties of both a wave and a particle, known as wave-particle duality.