A container mabey. Make your question more clear.
Hold polar molecules together
Within the molecule it is the covalent bonds which hold the atoms together. The facts that the molecule is polar or that the substance is in the solid state are irrelevant. If you were trying to ask what holds the molecules together to make the solid, then it is dipole-dipole forces and van der Waals forces.
In polar molecular solids' molecules are held together by relatively stronger dipole-dipole interactions.
A solid is made up of tightly packed molecules or atoms that are arranged in a regular pattern. These molecules or atoms vibrate in place but do not move around each other like in liquids or gases. The intermolecular forces between the molecules or atoms hold them in a fixed position.
The atoms and molecules in liquids move in a random pattern relative to one another instead of being in a solid form due to the intermolecular forces of attraction. The intermolecular forces are too weak to hold onto the molecules in a solid form.
mujhko nahi pata
A solid can hold its shape because the molecules hold together and vibrate in place.
Hold polar molecules together
Within the molecule it is the covalent bonds which hold the atoms together. The facts that the molecule is polar or that the substance is in the solid state are irrelevant. If you were trying to ask what holds the molecules together to make the solid, then it is dipole-dipole forces and van der Waals forces.
The force of attraction is generally stronger in the molecules of a solid compared to a liquid. In a solid, the molecules are closely packed and have limited movement, allowing for stronger intermolecular forces to hold them together. In a liquid, the molecules have more freedom to move, resulting in weaker intermolecular forces.
In polar molecular solids' molecules are held together by relatively stronger dipole-dipole interactions.
In any solid the particles have bonds holding the atoms together into molecules, and bonds (or forces) holding the molecules together to form the solid.
molecules that start closing together turn into solid example: think of water, when molecules are loose the water is liquid but when the molecules are packed together the water turns into ice
solid
Molecules stay together in outer space due to intermolecular forces such as Van der Waals forces, hydrogen bonding, and electrostatic attractions. These forces help hold atoms together within molecules and molecules together in solid, liquid, or gaseous states, even in the vacuum of space.
A group of molecules squeezed together is called a solid. In a solid, the molecules are closely packed and have fixed positions relative to each other.
Water molecules bunch together in the state of a solid.