Mostly they expand as they warm, contract as they cool.
Solids have a fixed shape and volume, maintaining a definite structure, while liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container, flowing and conforming to it. Gases have neither a fixed shape nor volume, filling the space available to them and expanding to fit any container.
Measurements of volume for both solids and liquids involve determining the amount of space that the substance occupies. This is typically done using measuring tools such as a graduated cylinder for liquids and a ruler or geometric formulas for solids. The volume of a solid or liquid is usually expressed in cubic units such as cubic centimeters or milliliters.
No, nothing can have a negative volume. No such thing.
Liquids are generally heavier than solids because the molecules in liquids are more densely packed together and have more mass per unit volume compared to solids. Additionally, liquids tend to have a higher density than solids, making them heavier when compared in equal volumes.
Solids are not completely incompressible, but they are much less compressible than liquids and gases. This means that solids can be compressed slightly under high pressure, but their volume does not change significantly compared to liquids and gases.
Solids and liquids both have definite volumes. Gasses, however, do not have a definite volume.
ANSWER unlike solids, both liquids and gases can change their shape to fit the container in which they are held. however, gases can also change volume unlike liquids.
they all contract.
Solids have a fixed shape and volume, liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container, and gases have neither a fixed shape nor volume and expand to fill their container. The particles in solids are tightly packed, in liquids they are loosely packed, and in gases they are far apart. Additionally, solids have the strongest intermolecular forces, followed by liquids, then gases.
solids and liquids
Solids are less changed in volume by pressure than fluids (liquids or gasses or plasmas) because the atoms or molecules in solids are more closely bound by the chemical bonds that form them. JCF
Yes, liquids have a definite volume but not a definite shape, compared to solids that have a definite shape and a definite volume or gasses that have neither a definite shape or volume.
A change in volume with a constant, unchanging Pressure and Temperature results in increased or decreased density, inversely dependent on increase or decrease in volume.
No. Solids are resistant to changes in both shape and volume.
both are fixed (unless acted upon by outside forces) in a solid; volume is fixed but shape is malleable in a liquid; and both are malleable in a gas.
Solids have a definite shape and volume, while liquids have a definite volume but take the shape of their container. Liquids can flow and take the shape of the container they are in, unlike solids which have a fixed shape.
solids and liquids