Particles of matter have mass, which determines their weight and affects their interactions with other particles. Particles of matter have volume, which determines the amount of space they occupy. Particles of matter are constantly in motion, vibrating or moving within a substance.
The three main phases of matter are solid, liquid, and gas. Solids have a fixed shape and volume, with particles tightly packed and not easily compressible. Liquids have a fixed volume but take the shape of their container, with particles that are close together but can move past each other. Gases have neither a fixed shape nor volume, with particles that are far apart and move freely.
Alpha particles are the least penetrating, and are not able to pass through a single sheet of paper. Beta particles can penetrate through a sheet of paper, but not a piece of aluminum. Gamma rays can travel through both paper and aluminum and it takes dense material like lead to stop them or reduce their number. Gamma rays are high energy electromagnetic rays.
Liquid, Solid, Gaseous, Plasmas, and Bose-Einstein condensates.
Mediocre. The following list gives information on the forces between particles in different states of matter: Bose-Einstein Condensate: Absent Solid: Weak Liquid: Neutral, or mediocre Gas: Strong Plasma: Very strong Absolute Heat Fluid: Infinite
Not really. It's traditional to list them least to greatest.
Traditionally, least to greatest.
Greatest on a list of proper fractions, least on a list of improper fractions.
Particles of matter have mass, which determines their weight and affects their interactions with other particles. Particles of matter have volume, which determines the amount of space they occupy. Particles of matter are constantly in motion, vibrating or moving within a substance.
The Standard Model of Particle Physics gives a good list of particles and their masses.
That's an infinite list.
1,2,4,11,22,44
least to greatest
No, 2.9 is the greatest number in that list, it should be last.
Electron, proton, nucleus, atom
The range is the difference between the greatest and least numbers.
In the list of common factors, the greatest is the largest, the least is the smallest (which is always 1)