Gas fills the container because gas particles are in constant, random motion and will spread out to uniformly fill the space available to them. This behavior is governed by the gas particles colliding with each other and the walls of their container, creating pressure that pushes the gas to expand until it reaches equilibrium.
A gas can expand to fill the entire volume of its container because the particles are not confined and can move freely. When a gas is placed in a container, it will fill the entire space available to it.
Gas does not have a definite shape or volume because the particles in a gas are free to move and expand to fill the container they are in. Gas takes the shape of its container and expands to fill the available space.
Liquid. It can flow and take the shape of any container it is in.
The substance that occupies the entire volume of a container is called a gas. Gas particles are free to move around and fill the space available to them.
A gas phase has its volume determined by its container. Gases expand to fill the entire volume of the container they are in, with no specific shape or volume of their own.
Yes, a gas will always fill the container that it is in.
The gas molecules move freely and independently from one another, filling the entire volume of their container because of their high kinetic energy. This results in the gas taking the shape of its container and exerting pressure on its walls evenly.
Yes, gas will uniformly fill any container it is put in to fill the available space. The gas molecules will spread out to evenly fill the space they are contained in.
A gas can expand to fill the entire volume of its container because the particles are not confined and can move freely. When a gas is placed in a container, it will fill the entire space available to it.
It will completely fill the container.
It expands to fill the container.
Gas has no fixed volume or shape, therefore using diffusion to fill the empty spaces and filling the container.
The gas expand to fill the volume of the container.
Yes, particles in a gas will fill the available space of their container and take on the shape of the container. The volume of the container doesn't affect this behavior as the particles will distribute evenly throughout the space.
Yes, a gas will take the shape and volume of its container as it fills the space available to it. Gas molecules are free to move and expand so they will evenly distribute themselves to fit the container.
The shape of the gas is determined by the shape of the container (assuming that there is enough gas to fill the container). The volume of the gas is determined by the volume of the container (again assuming that there is enough gas present to fill the container.). When a gas is introduced into any container, it will assume the size and shape of the container if the container is filled. The exception to this rule might be if the pressure of the gas introduced is great enough to influence the shape of the container (i.e. blowing up a balloon).
Gas does not have a definite shape or volume because the particles in a gas are free to move and expand to fill the container they are in. Gas takes the shape of its container and expands to fill the available space.