Faster. This assumes the same type of atoms or molecules.
Faster. This assumes the same type of atoms or molecules.
If atoms and particles in an object stopped moving, the object would not disappear but rather become very cold and still. Objects are made up of atoms and particles, but their presence is not solely dependent on their movement.
A denser fluid would exert stronger pressure on an object in the fluid than a less dense fluid would because of the pressure differences. A denser fluid would have a greater pressure difference, therefore greater buoyancy, and exerting stronger pressure on the object.
If particles were to stop moving completely, all processes that depend on particle motion and interaction, such as chemical reactions, heat transfer, and electrical conductivity, would cease. This would result in a state of absolute zero temperature, where all molecular motion stops.
If an object that sinks into a fluid has a lower density than the fluid, it would float. If the object has a higher density than the fluid, it would sink. The state of matter of the object does not determine whether it will float or sink - it's the density that determines the behavior.
Faster. This assumes the same type of atoms or molecules.
The individual molecules will be moving faster at 100 °C, than at 0°C. The molecules would also be further apart (ie. they would occupy a larger volume).
In solid form, chocolate particles are tightly packed, structured, and hold their shape. In liquid form, the particles are more spread out, fluid, and free-moving. The solid form will have a defined shape, while the liquid form will conform to the container it's in.
If atoms and particles in an object stopped moving, the object would not disappear but rather become very cold and still. Objects are made up of atoms and particles, but their presence is not solely dependent on their movement.
Gas has the fastest moving particles among the states of matter. In a gas, the particles have more energy and move more quickly compared to particles in solids or liquids.
I believe it would be stationary but i am not sure
Ice particles form rigid crystalline structures. Liquid water is more fluid and dense.
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If you are asking when particles are "able to move freely" that would be a liquid. If you simply ask about "moving" then that would be a solid, since in a solid the particles are still movings.
A diagram showing sedimentation of particles settling out of a moving fluid, such as a river or ocean, would represent deposition. This diagram would typically show sediment being dropped and accumulated on the bottom of the body of water.
Temperature is a measurement of the average kinetic energy on the atomic or molecular level; hotter substances have faster moving particles. Faster moving particles have more energetic collisions with the particles of which solids are formed, which are more able to knock them out of the solid and into the solution, than slower moving particles would be.
because the particles in solids are more close together and strong so they would support it better than fluid because fluid particles are spread out. Hope this helps. : )