Yes, but not all particles have to have mass. remember that those particles (photons... etc) aren't matter at all but gauge bosons. Gauge bosons occupy a single zero-dimentional point (except for when it's a wave; see particle-wave duality), because they have no mass, and thus don't take up space.
Yes, mass takes up space because mass is a measure of matter in an object, and matter occupies physical space. The more mass an object has, the more space it takes up.
False. Matter, by definition, occupies space and has mass. All forms of matter have volume, which means they take up physical space.
Matter
Anything that has mass and takes up space is matter
Anything that has mass and takes up space is considered matter.
Yes, all matter has a mass and takes up space.
No. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space (has volume). Energy has no mass and does not take up space, therefore it is not matter.
Yes, mass takes up space because mass is a measure of matter in an object, and matter occupies physical space. The more mass an object has, the more space it takes up.
It has to take up space. (Have mass)
Mass
(all) matter.
False. Matter, by definition, occupies space and has mass. All forms of matter have volume, which means they take up physical space.
Anything that has mass and takes up space is matter. Energy is not matter because it does not have mass nor does it take up space. Pretty much everything else is matter.
All matter in the universe.
Matter
Anything that has mass and takes up space is matter. Energy is not matter because it does not have mass nor does it take up space. Pretty much everything else is matter.
All matter 1) has mass and 2) occupies space (has volume).