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Good answerIt's a liquid with gas in it like a balloon is a solid with gas in it
It's a liquid with gas in it like a balloon is a solid with gas in it
It's a liquid with gas in it like a balloon is a solid with gas in it
You didn't answer the question
Sorry but a bubble doesn't fit the properties of a liquid. Liquids have no fixed shape and you can not squeeze the molecules closer.
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Dude what are you talking about, people already explained its a mixture of both, and a bubble doesn't have a fixed shape because its liquid, at a molecular level the shape of the bubble moves alot and on a macro level the bubble will busrt or disperse when theres enough external force so its not a fixed shape at all
If i pour water in a glass does that water stop being a liquid because it has a momentary singular state? No its still a liquid that just conforms to whatever shape is being applied to it no different then a bubble..sorry to burst your bubble
A liquid takes the shape of it's container, so pouring water into a glass is irrelevant.
A bubble does emphatically have a fixed shape. Have you ever seen a cube bubble? or a pyramid shaped bubble?
Although I agree with you on one point, a bubble has a momentary singular state. In the context of space and time a bubble doesn't last very long compared to a rock, or liquid in a bottle. But for the few seconds that a bubble is suspended in mid air, I'd have to reject the notion of it being a liquid. Furthermore I'd have to reject the assertion that it's a gas.
Water vs a bubble are clearly two different substances. Just as different as water vs a rock. The difference (imo) is that a bubble only lasts for a few seconds, it has a shorter life span than a gas, liquid or solid.
This nigga lol smhYou didn't answer the question
Guys... a bubble isn't a state of matter or an element... it's an object made up of multiple elements or compounds in multiple states. Sorry to ruin the fun.
Gasses, liquids, solids and plasma are states of matter that are typically mutable based on many factors but most importantly heat.
eg: Is a rock a liquid? Ask a volcano.