Yes. You need space for matter to exist in, therefore they exist in the same place, but not in any other way.
Mass and energy always have locations in both time and space; the amount of space that they take up depends upon their density, but they do take up some. Since energy is often associated with matter (heat, kinetic energy etc.) it would be the matter that takes up the space. The energy would be in the same space as the matter. But energy can also exist independently of matter (such as a photon of light travelling in space) and in that case, the energy takes up space.
Two objects cannot occupy the same physical space at the same time due to the principles of physics and the concept of matter occupying physical space. This is known as the exclusion principle and applies to all physical objects in the observable universe.
Volume is a size-cubic feet or cubic meters. This volume is the same whether it contains something or is a perfect vacuum containing nothing. Matter just means the presence of atoms of some substance. So the answer is no, they are not the same.
When two waves exist in the same place at the same time, their amplitudes can add together (constructive interference) or cancel out (destructive interference) depending on their phase relationship. This phenomenon is known as wave interference.
I can think of two. Matter and Mass which are effectively the same thing. All matter has mass and all masses are composed of matter.
The same as other matter and energy in space.
A vacuum consist of anti-matter; the opposite of matter...matter is something and anti-matter is nothing. When something is added to the vacuum the anti-matter is displaced and only matter will now remains. If you were made out of anti-matter then your observable results would be the opposite. Matter and anti-matter cannot exist in the same space; only one of the two can exist in any place at any one time. When you remove matter from a space the only thing that can exisist in that space is anti-matter!
We are aware of your presence. You do since no other matter can occupy the same space but will you make it count for something is the true question
Mass and energy always have locations in both time and space; the amount of space that they take up depends upon their density, but they do take up some. Since energy is often associated with matter (heat, kinetic energy etc.) it would be the matter that takes up the space. The energy would be in the same space as the matter. But energy can also exist independently of matter (such as a photon of light travelling in space) and in that case, the energy takes up space.
No two units of matter can occupy the same space at once. This is one of the primary properties of matter.
Matter occupies space because the particles that make up matter have physical dimensions and mass, which means they cannot exist in the same space as other particles simultaneously without some form of separation. This is supported by empirical evidence from experiments in physics and chemistry that demonstrate matter has volume and takes up physical space.
If space aliens do indeed exist, they exist for the same reasons we exist. Whatver those reasons may be.
impenetrability
Two objects cannot occupy the same physical space at the same time due to the principles of physics and the concept of matter occupying physical space. This is known as the exclusion principle and applies to all physical objects in the observable universe.
There is no "best place" to put movies so they take up space. 1mb, 500mb,1gb, or even 10gb of video is the same no matter which folder you put it in.
This is due to the Pauli exclusion principle, which states that no two particles with half-integer spin (such as electrons) can occupy the same quantum state within a given system. Because matter is composed of particles that obey this principle, they cannot occupy the same space simultaneously.
space is as much same as infinity, if we can find an end to infinity, which is impossible, hence, space is also not measurable entity.