1. States of Matter Poems
     
    Magic Water
    H2O)
    When water freezes
    Or water boils It gets a different name,
    It turns to ice
    It turns to steam But it's water just the same!
     
    Comparing States of Matter

     
  2. What is Matter
    Properties describe matter. A block of wood, milk, and air all have properties. All the material on earth is in three states-solid, liquid, and gas. The "state" of the matter refers to the group of matter with the same properties. In other words, you group the objects together according to their properties.

     
  3. States of Matter
    Matter occupies space and has mass. Chemistry deals with the composition, properties and behavior of matter.

     
  4. Matter
    Matter = stuff. Matter is everything. From air to water to rocks, and even you. Matter can be organic (living) or inorganic. There are three common states of matter.

     
  5. States of Matter
    Normally, here on earth, we find matter in one of three states: Solid, or frozen, like ice. Liquid, like water. Gas or vapor, like steam.
     
  1. What is Matter
    All matter is the same because all matter is made up of atoms. Matter is also different because objects can be made up of different kinds of atoms. Gold is made of one kind of atom-gold atoms. Salt is made up of two different kinds of atoms-sodium atoms and chloride atoms.

     
  2. Matter
    So you made it to the section that really matters. (Ha-Ha) Matter is everything. Anything that takes up space or has a mass of any kind is matter.

     
  3. States of Matter; Compton's On-Line
    An electron, a grain of sand, an elephant, and a giant quasar at the edge of the visible universe all have one thing in common--they are composed of matter. A beam of light, the motion of a falling stone, and the explosion of a stick of dynamite all have one thing in common--they are expressions of energy. Energy and matter together make up the physical universe.

     
  4. Ask Geoman: What are the 4 states of matter?
    Any and all substances can exist in one of 4 forms (also called "states" or "phases") Which state the material is in basically depends upon its temperature. The easiest example is water (a liquid). Take away heat and it becomes a solid (we call it ice). Add heat and it turns into a gas we call water vapor.