What is the difference between GAS and VAPOUR.?
Answers
Answered by
2
Best Answer
Vapor (US English) or vapour (British English) is the gaseous state of matter.
Although vapour and gas are frequently used interchangeably, vapour often carries the connotation of gaseous matter in a state of equilibrium with identical matter in a liquid or solid state below its boiling point. A liquid or solid does not have to boil to release a vapour.
A gas is one of the four main phases of matter (after solid and liquid, and followed by plasma), that subsequently appear as a solid material is subjected to increasingly higher temperatures. Thus, as energy in the form of heat is added, a solid (e.g. ice) will first melt to become a liquid (e.g. water), which will then boil or evapourate to become a gas (e.g. water vapour).
The constituent atoms or molecules of a vapor possess vibrational, rotational, and translational motion.
In the gas phase, the atoms or molecules constituting the matter basically move independently, with no forces keeping them together or pushing them apart.........SIR THIS IS WHAT I GOT FROM NET..IF I'LL EXPLAIN IN WORDS MAY BE YOU'LL UNDERSTAND OR ANYTHING SO!! So I've given you the appropriate answer from one of my friend! Thanks dear! ...mark it as BRAINLIEST
Renusrivastava:
If I'll explain in my words^
Similar questions
Hindi,
7 months ago
Social Sciences,
7 months ago
English,
7 months ago
English,
1 year ago
English,
1 year ago