Matter in any state can be propelled as fast as you want.
Answer:
Within the relativistic Universe matter can go as fast as the speed of light (with great difficulty). Excluding tachyons which (if they exist) the only matter observed to go at the speed of light are photons. Photons do not fall into the normal solid, liquid or gas states of matter as they have both wave and particle characteristics and no rest mass.
For normal matter, the problems with acceleration require that the lightest particles will travel fastest for any amount of acceleration energy. This would call for the dissolution of the matter into individual atoms (into a gas) and the acceleration of the individual atoms.
In this roundabout manner gases can be accelerated the most so the can travel the fastest.
Typically heat changes the STATE of matter from solid to liquid to gas.However, heat can also cause chemical changes for example combustion.
Temperature. Temperature causes matter to change state.
Heat does not occupie space, and does not have definite volume, so it is not a matter!!!!^_^
Different temperatures cause matter to change state. When the temperature lowers, matter condenses and forms a solid. When the temperature rises, matter spreads out and becomes a liquid. If the temperature rises even further, the matter could become so spread out that it isn't visible to the naked eye anymore, which would be a gas.
it depends like there are some solids which are better conductors than others but I think that gases are the worst conductors of heat as they have lots of spaces between there molecules and so heat cant pass throught them....
Heat travels through waves of insulation through metals and other materials. The only metals that heat does not travel through are aluminum and nickel.
No, heat cannot travel by conduction or convection in a vacuum since there are no molecules to transfer the heat. However, heat can still be transferred by radiation, which does not require a medium and can travel through a vacuum as electromagnetic waves.
As a matter of fact, it can.
Heat travels fastest through materials that are good conductors, such as metals like copper and aluminum. These materials have high thermal conductivity, allowing heat to move quickly through them.
A change in the state of matter occurs when heat energy is added or removed.
If you add heat to matter, it can either get it hotter, or it can change the state of matter (for example, from solid to liquid).
None of the above. Heat is energy, not matter.
solid, metallic
I believe "heat"To change from one state of matter to another state of matter heat is added or taken away.I think that makes sense!
This is a gas.
Radiation waves can travel in space, which is are later converted into heat when it hits matter.
Heat travels fastest in solids because the particles are closer together and can transfer energy more efficiently through collisions. Liquids and gases have particles that are more spread out, leading to slower heat transfer.