If a fixed volume of gas is placed in a container, it will expand or contract to match the volume of the container. This is because gases have the ability to fill the entire volume of their container, assuming no other forces are applied. As the container size changes, the gas molecules will adjust by moving closer together or farther apart to occupy the new volume.
Yes, liquids have a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. They take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and assume the shape of the space they occupy.
A liquid has a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. If you put it into a graduated cylinder, it will take the shape of the cylinder. If you put it into a bowl, it will take the shape of the bowl.
The substance would be in a gaseous state if it had no fixed volume. Gases have no fixed shape or volume and can expand to fill the container they are in.
Mass and volume
Solids: they have fixed shape and fixed volume. They cannot be compressed much. They cannot flow. They do not fill their container completely. They have high density. They are heavy. Liquids: they have fixed volume but not fixed shape they take the shape of their container. They cannot be compressed much. They can flow. They do not fill their container completely. They have moderate to high density. Gases: they do not have fixed shape and volume. They can be compressed easily. They can flow. They fill their container completely. They have very low density.
Liquids have a fixed volume but do not have a fixed shape. They take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and adapt to their surroundings.
A solid has a fixed volume and form. A liquid has a fixed volume but has the form of a container. A gas has not a fixed volume or form.
Yes, liquids have a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. They take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and assume the shape of the space they occupy.
A liquid has a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. If you put it into a graduated cylinder, it will take the shape of the cylinder. If you put it into a bowl, it will take the shape of the bowl.
Yes. They will take the volume of whatever container they are in.
Yes, though the volume isn't fixed. It has he volume and shape of its container.
The substance would be in a gaseous state if it had no fixed volume. Gases have no fixed shape or volume and can expand to fill the container they are in.
Gases do not have a fixed shape or volume; they expand to completely fill the container they occupy.
Solid: Particles are tightly packed together, have a fixed shape and volume, and vibrate in place. Liquid: Particles are close together but can flow and take the shape of their container, with a fixed volume. Gas: Particles are far apart, move freely, have no fixed shape or volume, and fill the entire container they are in.
Solids and liquids both have fixed volumes... in that if they are put into a container, they will not expand to fill the container. Gases on the other hand, do the exact opposite - they expand to fill their containers, thus not having fixed volumes.
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.
Mass and volume