A solid has a definite shape and volume.
A liquid has a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. If you put it into a graduated cylinder, it will take the shape of the cylinder. If you put it into a bowl, it will take the shape of the bowl.
Yes, the pressure in the ocean can potentially change the shape of a glass bottle. The external water pressure increases the deeper you go in the ocean, which can lead to the bottle being compressed or deformed due to the difference in pressure inside and outside the bottle.
goat man
The form of a compound that does not change its shape or its volume is a solid. In solids, particles are closely packed in a fixed arrangement, allowing them to maintain a definite shape and volume. This contrasts with liquids and gases, which can flow and take the shape of their containers.
When the hot air inside the bottle cools down in the freezer, it will contract and decrease in volume. This decrease in volume causes the pressure inside the bottle to decrease, leading to a change in its shape. The bottle may collapse or deform as a result of the reduced pressure.
Fixed volume In terms of gases,is that a fixed volume would mean that the pressure, temperature and the number of molecules can change but the volume, or area in which the molecules lie, must remain constant. Think of a metal drinking bottle versus a plastic bottle. You cannot squirt water from a metal bottle because the shape is fixed, therefore the volume. You can squirt water from a plastic bottle because you can change the shape and reduce the volume.
The shape can change, the volume will stay the same.
The matter that can change shape and volume is gas.
A solid does. Liquids change in shape and gases change in both shape and volume.
A solid has a definite shape and volume.
A solid has a fixed volume and does not change shape.
A gas can change shape but it doesn't change volume, a liquid also changes shape but doesn't change volume.
Yes, they can take the shape and volume of their container.
Compression or stretching can change the shape of an object without changing its volume. When an object is compressed or stretched in one direction, its shape is altered but the volume remains constant.
flowing
No, the volume remains the same if you change the shape but not the amount of material. This is because the volume is determined by the quantity of material present, not how it is arranged.