Particles

Particles

Radiation has both wave like and particle like behaviour, but i will be focusing on the particles. Matter is made up of particles. A particle (a constituent part of an atom) is a miniature building block that makes up matter, and matter is anything that has weight and takes up space. The subatomic particles are protons, neutrons and electrons. Most matter comes in three states; solid, liquid or gas. When a particle of an atom gets hit by a wave it will start vibrating from the energy it absorbed and then it will seek to stabilise itself by sending out the energy in a form of a wave. It will take more time for radiation to happen in water because water is more dense than gas.
 * 1) Solid - The particles in a solid matter are pact so tight that they can only vibrate, and are too dense to let anything through it. The heat causes the vibration of the particles, and when it gets too hot, and the particles are vibrating too much, then the matter would go in to a faze transition into a liquid or gas. A solid has a definite size and shape.
 * 2) Liquid - The particles in a liquid matter have more space between then and can slide around. Liquid is a matter that has a definite size but not definite shape. If you freeze water it can faze transition into a solid, and if the liquid is heated then it can faze tradition into gas.
 * 3) Gas - There is so much space between the constantly moving particles in gas, that it is  very easy to move around in. Gas is a matter with no definite size or shape. Gas can faze transition to liquid by condensing, or solid by deposition.