According to Wikipedia, "in the scientific sense the term glass is often extended to all amorphous solids (and melts that easily form amorphous solids), including plastics, resins, or other silica-free amorphous solids."
According to some university's website the making of glass involves "forming a thick syrup and eventually an amorphous solid. The molecules then have a disordered arrangement, but sufficient cohesion to maintain some rigidity. In this state it is often called an amorphous solid or glass."
Amorphous solids are solids which lack the molecular structure that most solids have, most commonly due to a rapid cooling of the material from it's liquid state. Cotton candy is also considered an amorphous solid.
I, however, am not a physicist nor have I studied glass in any detail. Just writing what I found on a quick search through Google.
According to some university's website the making of glass involves "forming a thick syrup and eventually an amorphous solid. The molecules then have a disordered arrangement, but sufficient cohesion to maintain some rigidity. In this state it is often called an amorphous solid or glass."
Amorphous solids are solids which lack the molecular structure that most solids have, most commonly due to a rapid cooling of the material from it's liquid state. Cotton candy is also considered an amorphous solid.
I, however, am not a physicist nor have I studied glass in any detail. Just writing what I found on a quick search through Google.