both gas and liquid change based on their container.
The state of matter that keeps the same volume but changes shape when it changes container is a liquid. Liquids do not have a fixed shape but take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and fill the container.
A gas changes shape when placed into a container. Gases do not have a fixed shape or volume, and they expand to fill the space available to them. This is in contrast to solids and liquids, which have a fixed shape and volume.
The matter that takes the shape but not the volume of its container is a gas. Gases have particles that are far apart and move freely, allowing them to fill the shape of their container but not have a fixed volume.
A gas is a form of matter that does not have a definite shape or volume. Gases expand to fill the container they are in and take the shape of the container.
The two states of matter that take the shape of their container are gases and liquids. Gases have no fixed shape or volume and will expand to fill any container, while liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container.
The state of matter that keeps the same volume but changes shape when it changes container is a liquid. Liquids do not have a fixed shape but take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and fill the container.
the state of matter that changes shape when placed in a different container is water
Liquid. You can measure the exact volume of a liquid but you can put it into containers that changes the shape of the liquid.
A gas changes shape when placed into a container. Gases do not have a fixed shape or volume, and they expand to fill the space available to them. This is in contrast to solids and liquids, which have a fixed shape and volume.
Gas is a form of matter that does not take the shape of the container it is in. Instead, it expands to fill the space it is in, making it the only type of matter that does not have a fixed shape.
if matter expands to fill the volume of its container its a suspension.
Both a gas and a liquid will take the shape of its container.
Superfluidity
The matter that takes the shape but not the volume of its container is a gas. Gases have particles that are far apart and move freely, allowing them to fill the shape of their container but not have a fixed volume.
Matter that does not have a specific shape is known as amorphous matter. Examples include liquids and gases, which take the shape of their container. These types of matter do not have a definitive structure or form.
No. The liquid's shape changes to fit the container it's in, but the volume doesn't change.
Both a gas and a liquid will take the shape of its container.