Plasma is the fourth state of matter. It is a highly excited group of atoms and molecules that can only be achieved at incredibly high temperatures. Because the atoms and molecules are so excited they will act like a gas and expand to fill any container they are put into.
Plasma is broken or torn apart molecules. For example light is plasma since it does not have a density or volume. Which is why it is categorized as a plasma. So Plasma does not take shape of the container. (Im pretty sure im correct but if im wrong, im sorry.)
no. im 12 so just guessin :) but im pretty sure. if not tell my teacher.
A liquid
No, a liquid does not necessarily fill the container it is in; however liquids always take the shape of their container.
Gas spreads out to fill any type of container
It expands to fill the container.
When its enclosed in a container.
it will move randomly and quickly to fill the empty space in the container..that's how the matter in a gas do to fill the container.. P/s: gas is matter that has mass and occupied space.
The answer depends on the solid. If you dumped a large solid metal cube into a truck, it would not "spread outward" to fill a container. If you dumped small BBs (think BB gun BBs) into the same truck, the BBs would spread out & fill the container (if you poured enough of the BBs into the container to fill it). Both are solids, but one solid will not 'spread out' like the others.
The answer depends on the solid. If you dumped a large solid metal cube into a truck, it would not "spread outward" to fill a container. If you dumped small BBs (think BB gun BBs) into the same truck, the BBs would spread out & fill the container (if you poured enough of the BBs into the container to fill it). Both are solids, but one solid will not 'spread out' like the others.
Spread out.
Yes
In the gas phase, the particles spread out to completely fill their container.