Water and air have volume
TRUE OR FALSE
Answers
Answer:
But because air (and the atmosphere) is invisible, it can be hard to think of it as having properties like mass, volume, and pressure — or even being there at all! These simple activities and demos will help you prove that air indeed has volume (or in simpler terms, takes up space).
One milliliter (1 mL) of water has a volume of 1 cubic centimeter (1cm3). Different atoms have different sizes and masses. Atoms on the periodic table are arranged in order according to the number of protons in the nucleus. Even though an atom may be smaller than another atom, it might have more mass.
Step-by-step explanation:
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True
Water and air have volume - True
Liquids have a fixed volume, but they take on the shape of the container they are in. Gases take on the shape and volume of their container, and air is a colorless combination of many gases. Although air is imperceptible, it is a form of matter with mass and volume.
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