States of Matter That Aren't Fluids

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on identifying states of matter that are not classified as fluids, aside from solids. Participants mention various states, including solids, liquids, gases, plasmas, quark-gluon plasma, and Bose-Einstein condensates. There is a focus on how even solids can exhibit fluid-like behavior under certain conditions, such as geological processes over long timescales. However, the main inquiry is about states of matter that inherently do not behave like fluids. The conversation highlights the interest in understanding the characteristics of these different states of matter.
ScientificMind
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Aside from solids, are any of the known states of matter (exotic or otherwise) considered to not be fluids?
As a side note, I'd like to appologize in advance if this turns out to be posted under the wrong category of physics, I could not tell which category this would fall under and this seemed like the most accurate.
 
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ScientificMind said:
Aside from solids, are any of the known states of matter (exotic or otherwise) considered to not be fluids?

what other states of matter are you aware/familiar of/with ?
how about listing them here and then maybe doing some searching on the definitions of each :smile:

D
 
davenn said:
what other states of matter are you aware/familiar of/with ?
how about listing them here and then maybe doing some searching on the definitions of each :smile:

D
I currently know of solids, liquids, gasses, plasmas, and quark-gluon plasma. I have used Google in the past to find out about plasma however, and found that it seems to behave as a fluid.
 
ScientificMind said:
I have used Google in the past to find out about plasma however, and found that it seems to behave as a fluid.

yes and even solids can also do that
consider the earth, solid rock and appears that way on a small scale. But on a much larger scale, that of continent sized proportions
it can behave like a very viscous fluid ( and I'm not referring to the hot mantle or to lava)Dave
 
ScientificMind said:
I currently know of solids, liquids, gasses, plasmas, and quark-gluon plasma. I have used Google in the past to find out about plasma however, and found that it seems to behave as a fluid.
Add Bose-Einstein condensate to the cold end of that list.
 
davenn said:
yes and even solids can also do that
consider the earth, solid rock and appears that way on a small scale. But on a much larger scale, that of continent sized proportions
it can behave like a very viscous fluid ( and I'm not referring to the hot mantle or to lava)

Dave
Yes, I am aware that on a large scale and over long periods of time, the Earth's crust seems to behave almost as a fluid, but to my understanding, that phenomenon, like the liquid used in the Pitch Drop Experiment, this is an example of extreme situations rather than the norm. I was wondering more about states in which the norm is to not be fluid rather than in primarily just in extreme or rare examples.
mrspeedybob said:
Add Bose-Einstein condensate to the cold end of that list.
Thank you, I did not know about that one. It will be very interesting to find out more about Bose-Einstein condensate.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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