I think you are slightly confused. Water is made of matter. Everything is made of matter. So when you ask what other substances have the same matter, the answer is everything except anti-matter. (although some people would say that anti-matter is also matter.)
I think your question is asking about phases, not states of matter. Matter typically falls into 3 common phases: solid, liquid, and gas. Matter can change states when energy is gained or lost. Of these three phases, solid matter has the least amount of energy and gasses have the most.
There are also other phases. These include plasmas, superfluids, supersolids, Bose-Einstein condensates, fermionic condensates, liquid crystals, strange matter and quark-gluon plasmas.
So to sum up. All matter has phases. Water can occur naturally as a solid, liquid, or gas. Most matter that is a gas at room temperature can be turned into a liquid or a solid when it is put under high pressure or extreme cold. An example of this would be Nitrogen which is a gas at room temperature, but turns into a liquid around -195.79 °C (-320.42 °F) and becomes a solid at -210.00 °C (-346.00 °F). Liquid Nitrogen is used to keep things extremely cold and to remove warts by freezing them.
2007-01-26 14:58:15
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answer #1
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answered by Kyle 2
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None naturally, on Earth, if that's what you mean, this is called the triple point of water. The temperature on Earth varies enough so that water can exist in all three states naturally. On some moon of Jupiter (not sure which one) there is a triple point of methane, a gas here on Earth, but there, in theory, it could exist in all three states.
I hope this helps.
2007-01-26 14:23:18
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answer #2
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answered by Labsci 7
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Isopropyl alcohol Melting factor = -89 C (yet you should go with liquid nitrogen to freeze it) Boiling factor = 80 2 C tert-Butanol (no longer extremely particular the position you'll get it) Melting factor = 26 C Boiling factor = 80 2 C Benzene Melting factor = 6 C Boiling factor = 80 C regrettably all of those are flammable.
2016-10-16 04:03:19
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answer #3
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answered by garfield 4
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There is only one other state of matter, plasma. You normally find this state during fusion reactions (like in suns).
This is pretty much ionized gas at an extremely high temperature.
2007-01-26 14:19:51
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answer #4
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answered by Christina 6
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All substances have the same phases. Some of these substances have extreme high or low temperatures and pressures to make them change.
2007-01-26 14:18:25
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answer #5
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answered by n_m_young 4
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All matter has those same 3 states.
Check this article out.
2007-01-26 14:20:07
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answer #6
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answered by kip 2
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Only water has the mater of water, pure water that is. If it has something else, then its not technically water.
2007-01-26 14:18:56
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answer #7
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answered by SnowXNinja 3
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all matter have those three states
and there's a fourth: plasma
2007-01-26 14:17:30
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answer #8
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answered by Michael Dino C 4
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