A solid has its own shape and volume. Liquids have their own volume but take the shape of their container, while gases assume the shape and volume of their container.
No definite shape and no definite volume. The volume of a gas is a function of the pressure. Increase pressure and the volume will drop. Gasses will expand to fill all the available volume if left to their own device, if no exterior pressure is applied.
Solids are the type of matter with contain their own shape. Liquids take the shape of the container they are in and gasses fill their container, so therefore, solids are the type of matter which have a shape of their own.
liquid has no definite shape and a solid has no definite shape or volume
- solids have a shape and a volume- liquids have a volume but not a shape- gases haven't shape or volume (in free form)
A solid has a volume and a shape a liquid has a volume but no certain shape a gas has no certain volume and no certain shape
liquid
A fluid.
Liquids.
a liquid. it takes the shape of its container
Liquids.
Liquids.
it has volume and shape of its own
Yes. Solids have shapes and volume. Liquids take they're own shape and gas spreads.
Yes, solids have their own volume and shape. The particles in solids are closely packed together, giving them a fixed shape and volume. Examples of solids include wood, metal, and glass.
A gas.
This is a good working description of the gaseous phase of matter. A sample of gas will assume the shape and volume of its container, so the sample has no shape or volume of its own.
Yes. Liquids take the shape of a container but not the volume, and gases take the shape and volume of a container.