Matter is anything that has mass and volume, so there can be things like energy which are not necessarily matter.
Light, sound, and magnetic fields are examples of visible things that are not considered matter. These phenomena consist of energy and wave properties rather than physical particles, and thus are not classified as matter in traditional scientific terms.
No. Solid, liquid, and gas are states of matter, not energy. - - -- --- Matter (things) have energy (not things), and things can be solid, liquid, gas, or the fourth state of matter, called plasma. Most of the sun is plasma, but about 9% of it is gaseous.
No, not everything that can be seen fits the definition of matter. Matter refers to physical substances that occupy space and have mass. Some things that can be seen, such as light or energy, do not fit this definition.
Physicists get creative in their search for dark matter particles.
It takes up space and has mass.
The Things That Matter was created in 1985.
Five things that aren't matter are: sound, light, heat, gravity, and speed. Five things that are matter are air, water, foods, pencils, and paper.
Matter is anything that has mass and volume, so there can be things like energy which are not necessarily matter.
All things (objects) that exist are made out of matter.
All things have matter
it depends on how much things matter to you
It means to focus on the important things and not let the little things get in the way of these.
electricity
All are made from matter.
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no you cannot find matter in nonliving things and it does not have the same properties
All those things which occupy the space and have the mass are matter, but we also can say that , all those things which may be observed by our five sences are matter.