Yes. Gas Mass = sum of gas atoms= n(gas atoms).
A: I wonder this myself. Saturn is a massive gas giant. It has a huge gravitational pull. In fact, the gravitational pull is so powerful most of the rubble in its rings stays tiny because large pieces are smashed apart from the force of the gravity. Does gas have definite mass? If the core of this planet is super uranium, we may never know, but if its just gas all the way down.....I guess its plausible. A: Yes, a gas (in a definite volume, with a definite pressure, with a definite temperature) has a definite mass.
Gas has mass, but it does not have a definite volume because it conforms to the shape and size of its container. The mass of a gas is determined by the number of gas molecules present.
Of the three classic phases or states (solid, liquid, gas), gases do not have a defined shape or volume, which is determined by the shape and volume of their containers. A sample will have a defined mass, and the volume into which that mass is confined determines the pressure of the gas.
gas
Yes, gases have mass because they consist of individual particles (atoms or molecules) that have their own mass. The mass of a gas is determined by the combined mass of its individual particles.
A: I wonder this myself. Saturn is a massive gas giant. It has a huge gravitational pull. In fact, the gravitational pull is so powerful most of the rubble in its rings stays tiny because large pieces are smashed apart from the force of the gravity. Does gas have definite mass? If the core of this planet is super uranium, we may never know, but if its just gas all the way down.....I guess its plausible. A: Yes, a gas (in a definite volume, with a definite pressure, with a definite temperature) has a definite mass.
Gas has mass, but it does not have a definite volume because it conforms to the shape and size of its container. The mass of a gas is determined by the number of gas molecules present.
It doesn't, it expands and contracts in the space it has.
Of the three classic phases or states (solid, liquid, gas), gases do not have a defined shape or volume, which is determined by the shape and volume of their containers. A sample will have a defined mass, and the volume into which that mass is confined determines the pressure of the gas.
gas
gas
Matter that has a definite volume and a definite mass is... a SOLID. So any solid will be a correct answer to your question.
Liquids have a definite mass and volume, but not a shape.
Liquids have a definite volume but gas do not
Yes, liquid has a definite mass. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, and liquids, like all forms of matter, have mass. The mass of a liquid is determined by the density of the liquid and the volume of the liquid. The mass of a liquid can be measured using a balance or a scale.
Yes, gases have mass because they consist of individual particles (atoms or molecules) that have their own mass. The mass of a gas is determined by the combined mass of its individual particles.
No because gas has no definite shape and no definite volume