Fact Box

Level: 8.735

Tokens: 343

Types: 168

TTR: 0.49

Liquid and Gas

The difference between a liquid and a gas is obvious under the conditions of temperature and pressure commonly found at the surface of the Earth. A liquid can be kept in an open container and filled to the level of a free surface. A gas forms no free surface but tends to diffuse throughout the space available; it must therefore be kept in a closed container or held by a gravitational field, as in the case of a planet's atmosphere.

The distinction was a prominent feature of early theories describing the phases of matter. In the nineteenth century, for example, one theory maintained that a liquid could be "dissolved" in a vapor without losing its identity, and another theory held that the two phases are made up of different kinds of molecules: liquidons and gasons. The theories now prevailing take a quite different approach by emphasizing what liquids and gases have in common. They are both forms of matter that have no permanent structure, and they both flow readily. They are fluids.

The fundamental similarity of liquids and gases becomes clearly apparent when the temperature and pressure are raised somewhat. Suppose a closed container partially filled with a liquid is heated. The liquid expands, or in other words becomes less dense; some of it evaporates. In contrast, the vapor above the liquid surface becomes denser as the evaporated molecules are added to it. The combination of temperature and pressure at which the densities become equal is called the critical point. Above the critical point the liquid and the gas can no longer be distinguished, there is a single, undifferentiated fluid phase of uniform density.

Short Answer Questions

  1. The difference between a liquid and a gas under the normal conditions on the Earth is that the liquid can ____ and has ____.
  2. What do the current theories emphasize about liquids and gases?
  3. When can we see the fundamental similarity of liquids and gases?
  4. When is there the critical point?
  5. What happens to a liquid and a gas above the critical point?

(Keys.)