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they are - solid, liquid, gas , plasma, supercritical fluid , superfluid , colloid , supersolid , degenerate matter , quark gluon plasma , fermionic condensate , bose einstein condensate and
strange matter

2007-02-01 23:46:04 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

1 answers

I won't call a colloid as a state of matter, because it's a mixture.

degenerate matter : it's not a changement of state. at millions of bars crystalline structure of solids can degenerate, but it's still just a solid state.

strange matter: i'm sure that no one never saw strange matter, it's just theory.

quark gluon plasma: not even the Z-machine can separate quarks to obtain a quark gluon plasma, it's just a state of matter theorized in the big bang theory.

OFFICIAL states of matter are:
solid, liquid, gas, supercritical fluid, plasma and the strange superfluid state of supercooled Helium, called He II liquid state, that do not have normal FD (fluidodynamics) properties.

so only 6 at my knowledge.

2007-02-02 00:03:52 · answer #1 · answered by scientific_boy3434 5 · 0 0

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