Chemistry, asked by azeemrashid, 10 months ago

CAN WE CONSIDER PLASMA A STATE OF MATTER OR IS IT JUST FOR KNOWLEDGE BUT NOT TO CONSIDER A MATTER

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Answered by kshamnani7249
1

Answer:

A plasma is a hot ionized gas consisting of approximately equal numbers of positively charged ions and negatively charged electrons. The characteristics of plasmas are significantly different from those of ordinary neutral gases so that plasmas are considered a distinct "fourth state of matter." For example, because plasmas are made up of electrically charged particles, they are strongly influenced by electric and magnetic fields (see figure) while neutral gases are not. An example of such influence is the trapping of energetic charged particles along geomagnetic field lines to form the Van Allen radiation belts.

Answered by prabhmannat42
0

plasma is one of the four fundamental States of matter and was first discovered by a chemist Irving Langmuir in the 1920s .it consists of a gas of ions,atom which have some of the orbital electron removed and freely electrons.

plasma is a state of matter that is often throughout as a subset of gases but the Two States behave very differently but unlike ordinary gases plasma are made up of atoms in which some or all of the electrons have been stripped away and positively charged neculi, called ions roam freely.

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