NO! Matter is defined as the stuff (atoms, particles, elements, minerals, etc) that makes up everything in the world. Matter and weight are not the same things. Weight depends on how much gravity is effecting you. (you would weigh less on the moon because there is less gravitational influence) Matter is everything that makes up everything
Gas can sometimes be visible with the example of smoke from a cigarette but it is also invisible as in the case of carbon monoxide which could not be seen or smelled.
Its either: 1. elemnts put together 2. Atoms put together Real answer: #1
Invisible gas does not fit into the categories of metal or nonmetal. It is a state of matter that refers to gases that are not visible to the naked eye. Many elements in the periodic table can exist in the form of invisible gases, such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide.
Dark matter is not visible to the naked eye and does not emit, absorb, or reflect light, so it does not have a color like visible matter. It remains invisible and undetectable through traditional telescopes, which is why it is called "dark" matter.
Oxygen in its pure form is a colorless, odorless gas at room temperature and pressure. It is a diatomic molecule composed of two oxygen atoms joined together.
Gas can sometimes be visible with the example of smoke from a cigarette but it is also invisible as in the case of carbon monoxide which could not be seen or smelled.
Only one I can think of is, "Sometimes the heart sees what is invisible to the eye."
Any matter that does not produce or reflect photons of light that are between 750-380 nanometers in wavelength. Or it could be dark matter which we still don't know what exactly is dark matter.
Its either: 1. elemnts put together 2. Atoms put together Real answer: #1
Invisible gas does not fit into the categories of metal or nonmetal. It is a state of matter that refers to gases that are not visible to the naked eye. Many elements in the periodic table can exist in the form of invisible gases, such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide.
matter must have mass and volume.though it may be visible or invisible.
Dark matter is invisible. It doesn't interact with light.
Dark matter is not visible to the naked eye and does not emit, absorb, or reflect light, so it does not have a color like visible matter. It remains invisible and undetectable through traditional telescopes, which is why it is called "dark" matter.
If used in the context of "to be invisible" it is a verb. Hide can be used as a verb for invisible, as in "to hide from sight".
It depends what you mean by simplest. If you mean the smallest forms of matter, they are microscopic not invisible. If you mean basic components of matter such as quarks, atoms, molecules and so on, the answer is again that they are subatomic to microscopic in size and so not able to be seen without aid, yet not invisible. The only things that are truly invisible neither absorb nor scatter light, and therefore we can not see them in the visible light spectrum, like dark matter.
That matter was made of invisible particles
Sometimes this might be a glitch.