Plasma is extremely hot, reaching temperatures of thousands to millions of degrees Celsius. Its unique properties include being electrically conductive, not having a fixed shape or volume, and being able to generate magnetic fields. Plasma is different from solid, liquid, and gas states of matter because it is made up of charged particles and behaves more like a fluid than a solid or liquid.
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Solids, liquids, plasma, and gas are considered matter because they have mass and occupy space. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space, and these four states of matter exhibit these properties.
Plasma is the fastest state of matter because its particles move at very high speeds, much faster than those in solids, liquids, and gases.
There are five commonly recognized states of matter: solid, liquid, gas, plasma, and Bose-Einstein condensate. Each state of matter has distinct physical properties that differentiate it from the others.
The eight states of matter are solid, liquid, gas, plasma, condensate, superfluid, supersolid, and degenerate matter. Each state has its own unique properties and behaviors based on the arrangement of particles and their energy levels.
The till-date known states of matter are-solidliquidgasesplasmaBose-Einstein condensateFermionic condensateTransparent Aluminium