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  1. At low temperatures (below \(0^\text{o} \text{C}\)), it is a solid. Between \(0^\text{o} \text{C}\) and \(100^\text{o} \text{C}\)), it is a liquid. At temperatures above \(100^\text{o} \text{C}\), water is a gas (steam). The state that water is in depends upon the temperature, each state has its own unique set of physical properties.

  2. In a solid, the particles pack together tightly in a neat and ordered arrangement. The particles are held together too strongly to allow much movement but the particles do vibrate.

  3. May 20, 2018 · A solid has definite volume and shape, a liquid has a definite volume but no definite shape, and a gas has neither a definite volume nor shape. The change from solid to liquid usually does not significantly change the volume of a substance.

  4. Jun 22, 2014 · This animation explores water as a solid, liquid and gas. The water molecules stay the same, but they behave differently as they change from one form to another.

  5. The water is initially a solid at -40 °C, melts to become a liquid, and then evaporates to become a gas. Look through the slide show below to find out more about each stage of the heating...

  6. state of matter drawing simple and easy - solid - liquid - gases | science drawing academy#sciencedrawingacademy #stateofmatter #simple #easy #drawing

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  8. Sep 18, 2023 · From left to right: quartz (solid), water (liquid), nitrogen dioxide (gas). The state that a given substance exhibits is also a physical property. Some substances, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, exist as gases at room temperature. Others, like water and mercury metal, exist as liquids.