What are solids, liquids and gases?

Everything around us is made from matter, which has mass (weight) and takes up space (volume).
Matter can exist in different physical states. The three main states of matter are:
Solids, which keep their shape. Ice, rocks, and pencils are solids.
Liquids, which flow and take the shape of their container. Water, milk, and lava (hot molten rock) are liquids.
Gases, which spread out to fill the space they’re in. Air, steam and helium in balloons are gases.

Watch: Let's play solid, liquid or gas
See how Alice guesses whether objects are solid, liquid, or gas. Get ready to play along!
VOICEOVER: Let's play Solid Liquid Gas.
ANTON D'EQUE: Welcome to Solid Liquid Gas. Where our contestants decide if something's physical state is solid, liquid or gas. Let's meet today's contestant. And you are?
ALEX: Mostly solid, but also some liquid and a little bit of gas.
VOICEOVER: Gas
ALEX: I'm so sorry. That happens when I get nervous.
VOICEOVER: Gas
ALEX: Thought I got away with that one.
ANTON D'EQUE: You didn't.
VOICEOVER: Round one.
ANTON D'EQUE: Best of luck. Question one. An ice lolly.
ALEX: Um, well, it's a frozen liquid, so that makes it a solid.
VOICEOVER: Solid!
ANTON D'EQUE: Correct! Ice is the frozen solid state of water. Next question. Lava.
ALEX: Liquid
VOICEOVER: Solid!
ALEX: But lava's liquid rock?
ANTON D'EQUE: Yes, but we meant the lava that's just been cooled and become solid rock.
ALEX: Huh? That's a bit unfair isn't it.
ANTON D'EQUE: Now, clouds?
ALEX: Uh, gas. They're in the air.
VOICEOVER: Liquid!
ANTON D'EQUE: Clouds are made of tiny droplets of liquid water. And finally in this round, a lovely chilled moose.
ALEX: Oh.
WOMAN: I know this one. I love a chocolate mousse, urrm it's actually a semi-solid. It's a pudding made of gas bubbles surrounded by liquid, all in a kind of semi-solid form.
ANTON D'EQUE: A very clever answer, but sadly an incorrect one. We meant this lovely chilled moose.
VOICEOVER: Moose!
ALEX: It's so much easier when you're playing along at home.
ANTON D'EQUE: Quickfire round now. Jelly.
ALEX: Liquid.
VOICEOVER: Solid!
ANTON D'EQUE: Once it's set, it's solid. A gas cylinder?
ALEX: Gas.
ANTON D'EQUE: The cylinder is solid. But what about what's inside the gas cylinder?
ALEX: Gas.
ANTON D'EQUE: We filled it with milk.
VOICEOVER: Liquid!
ALEX: What?
ANTON D'EQUE: And finally, time for the million pound question.
VOICEOVER: 1 million.
ANTON D'EQUE: This is for the jackpot prize. Is it a solid, a liquid or a gas? Best of luck. Lightning.
ALEX: Errrr? Right, well it's not solid and it's not liquid, so it must be a gas.
ANTON D'EQUE: Oh, it's bad luck. Lightning is a fourth physical state called plasma.
VOICEOVER: Plasma!
ALEX: What? Plasma wasn't even an option!
ANTON D'EQUE: It's a bit like a gas, and it can be found in flames and lightning.
ALEX: You can't just change the rules?
ANTON D'EQUE: Yes, we can. And that's all we got time for. You'll be going home with a solid £3.
ALEX: Great, I'll buy myself an ice lolly.
ANTON D'EQUE: Join us again next time for another game of Solid, Liquid or Gas.
ALEX: And plasma apparently.
ANTON D'EQUE: Give us a solid wave.
Why can some things be tricky to classify?

Some materials don’t fit neatly into just one state. For example:
Jelly is an example of a semi-solid. It can wobble like a liquid but still hold its shape like a solid.
Clouds may look like gas, but they’re made of tiny droplets of liquid water floating in the air.
Oobleck, made from corn flour and water, can behave like a solid when you squeeze it, but flows like a liquid when you let it sit.
Foam is made of gas trapped inside a liquid, whipped cream is an example of this. Foam is soft and fluffy but still has a definite shape.
These examples show that not everything fits neatly into solid, liquid, or gas. Some materials can act like more than one state at the same time, wobbling, flowing, or trapping air in surprising ways.
Scientists call these tricky materials ‘non-Newtonian’ or ‘complex’ because they don’t behave like the simple solids, liquids, or gases we usually see.


Horrible Science fact
Lightning might look like fire, but it’s not. It’s an example of plasma, the fourth state of matter. Plasma is an extremely hot, glowing substance made from gas that becomes so hot it can carry electricity.
When electrical charges in clouds suddenly release as a spark, the air heats up so much that it turns into plasma. Plasma also appears in very hot flames, stars and neon signs.

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