Heat doesn't occupy space.
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Light is a form of energy and energy does not occupy space.
No. With large objects it is easy to see that they cannot occupy the same space. Smaller objects can appear as if they can occupy the same space but, at the molecular level they cannot. For example, you can dissolve sugar in a glass of water and it looks as if they are both occupying the same shape - but they are not. At the sub-atomic level, the Pauli exclusion principle prevents objects (electrons) occupying the same space.
ZERO Space, because SPAce IS A 3-DIMENSIONAL FEATURE. 2-DIMENSIONAL FEATURES occupy no space , because there is no third dimension.
They are shapes that occupy a volume in space. They have a length, width (or breadth) and height.
Volume is the space that an object occupies (or that it would occupy if it were to exist in the physical world rather than just as a concept).