No.
The freezing of water is a physical change. The water stays the same compound.
Very simple: measuring the density; also ice float on water.
Physical. Ice is simply the solid form of water. If it were a chemical change, then ice would not be water.
It is different because, liquid water can (and will) take the form of the container it is in. We can also change the form of liquid water, unlike solid ice. Solid Ice wont take the form of the container it is in and we cant change its form without breaking it.
Ice, is a solid form of water.
Water and crushed ice form a freezing point mixture.
Water and crushed ice form a freezing point mixture.
When a certain liquid goes into a solid form. Example water's freezing point is 32degrees Fahrenheit
a small particle upon which water molecules can collect in solid form.
Freezing water of is an example of physical change.
Technically, the freezing point of water is at 0oC. Water is most dense at 5oC, then if cooled further it would be solid at 0oC.
Ice is water in its solid form. When it melts, it is water in its liquid form. Most forms of matter take on either the solid, liquid, gas or plasma state depending on pressure and temperature.
No, freezing is a change in STATE of a substance (from liquid to solid), the solid is NOT a new substance.
Antifreeze keeps water from freezing when it is cold out. The antifreeze liquid lowers the freezing point of the water. Even when freezing (to a slurry) it does not form solid ice that can rupture the radiator. The antifreeze combines the water to form a liquid with a lower freezing point than water alone.
The freezing of water is a physical change. The water stays the same compound.
The characteristics of freezing is when water (or any other liquid) turns into a solid. This happens when the liquid gets cold and the molecules get closer together. When the molecules get closer together, they form a solid (ice).
Solidification is the process of freezing of the substance from liquid form into the solid form as the heat goes out of the substance ie as the temperature decreases.