Heat is a form of energy. It can be transmitted through space but it does not occupy space.
when heat occupieses space,the particles of heat are moving around in the space that they occupy
Heat doesn't occupy space.
yes
Good question.
Heat does not occupy space, as heat is just particles vibrating more rapidly. However, if you heat something up, it will occupy more space, due to its particles vibrating over a wider area. Light is much more complicated due to the weirdness of quantum mechanics. Light is made of photons. They're particles but not in the same way that molecules, atoms, electrons, neutrons and protons are. Light can behave like waves of energy instead of particles. Normal particles such as electrons occupy a bit of space and 2 of them cannot occupy the same space at the same time. A photon occupies the bit of space it's in, sort of, but another photon can occupy the same space at the same time. So if you have an electon-sized space you can put only one electron in it. If you have a photo-sized space you can put as many photons into it as you want.
No, heat and light are forms of energy, not physical matter, so they do not occupy space in the way that physical objects do. They can be present in a space, but they do not have a fixed volume or mass like matter does.
A stone has a solid mass and does occupy space.
yes,smoke does have mass and it does occupy space
Light is a form of energy and energy does not occupy space.
Objects have mass and occupy space. Persons have mass and occupy space.
Yes, liquid does occupy space. All matter (liquids, solids, gas, etc) occupy space.
No, all forms of matter do have mass and occupy space.