Three States of Water

Water can be three completely different things — ice, water, or vapour — yet it's the same stuff inside. This 90-second narrated lesson teaches kids what makes a state solid, liquid or gas, and shows how the particles behave in each. Includes a quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🧊 Three States of Water
Same water — three faces.IceWaterVapour

Look at this. An ice cube, a glass of water, and a puff of steam from a kettle. They all look completely different — but here's the secret. They're all the SAME thing. They're all water. Just in three different states.

What does 'state of matter' mean?

Everything around us is made of tiny particles too small to see. The way those particles are arranged decides whether something is a solid, a liquid, or a gas. Water is special because we see all three forms in everyday life: ice in the freezer (solid), water in a glass (liquid), and water vapour rising from a hot cup (gas).

Solid — particles tightly packed

In a solid like ice, the particles are packed close together in a neat grid pattern. They can vibrate a little but can't move around. Because the particles are locked in place, a solid keeps its own shape — an ice cube stays a cube whether it's in your hand or in a glass.

Liquid — particles slide around

In a liquid like water, particles are still close together, but they can slide past each other freely. This is why liquid water flows — and why it takes the shape of whatever container you put it in. A bottle, a glass, or a river bed; the water just fits.

Gas — particles spread far apart

In a gas like water vapour, particles fly apart and zoom around quickly in all directions. They have so much energy that they spread out to fill any container completely. If there's no lid, they just escape into the air. Steam from a kettle is water in gas form.

Why does water exist in all three?

Many substances exist in only one state at room temperature (rocks are solid, oil is liquid, oxygen is gas). Water is unusual because the temperatures we live at are right next to its freezing point and not too far below its boiling point. So a little cooling makes it ice; a little heating makes it vapour. That makes water perfect for studying states of matter.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between water and water vapour?

Both are made of the same H₂O particles. In water, particles are close together and slide past each other (liquid). In water vapour, particles are far apart and zoom around freely (gas). Water vapour is invisible — the white cloud you see above a hot cup is actually tiny droplets of water that have already cooled and condensed back from vapour.

Is steam a liquid or a gas?

Strictly speaking, the white visible cloud is liquid (tiny droplets). The truly invisible vapour just above the water is the gas. We use 'steam' loosely to mean both.

Can the same water be in two states at once?

Yes! At exactly 0°C, ice and water can co-exist (a glass of icy water). At 100°C, boiling water and water vapour exist together. Physicists call those exact temperatures 'phase transitions'.

Are there other states of matter?

There's a fourth state called plasma — found in lightning, the Sun, and neon signs. There are also some very exotic states at extremely cold temperatures (Bose-Einstein condensates), but for everyday science we just need solid, liquid, and gas.

Why does a solid keep its shape but a liquid doesn't?

It's all about how tightly the particles are bound. Solids have particles locked in place. Liquids have particles that can slide. Gases have particles that fly free.

More lessons