Water will stay the same weight when it is frozen, it still has the same molecules that it started with
It will still weigh one pound. The only thing that will change is its' size since it will expand by 9% and will become less dense.
They weigh the same
Meat will always weigh the same whether thawed or frozen. This is will hold true unless the water from the meat will be drained during the thawing process. It will then weigh lighter than its frozen state.
16 ounces is equivalent to 1 pound, so a pound weight of 16 ounces of frozen strawberries in syrup would weigh exactly 1 pound.
they both weigh the same. a pound is a pound. No matter what
One pint of water.
They weigh the same
The same it weighed when it was liquid---but it has a greater volume because ice is "fluffier" than water.
Yes, an ounce of water will weigh the same when it is frozen. The mass of the water remains unchanged during the phase transition from liquid to solid; only its state and volume change. Therefore, whether it's in liquid or frozen form, an ounce of water retains its weight.
yes, when you buy frozen fish you also buy frozen water so you get less fish.
No, frozen water weighs the same as liquid water. When water freezes, it expands in volume but maintains the same mass, so the weight remains constant.
Assuming that no weight is added or taken away, the weight (or the mass) will remain the same. However, this assumption is not always correct: when you freeze stuff, sometimes it accumulates moisture from the surrounding air, which then freezes.