by 'the law of non-compress ability of liquid' a liquid can neither be compressed nor be expanded.
Between 3'C and 0'C water does expand with a decrease in temperature. Water at 3'C is the densest; water at 0'C is the lightest.
This is the only interval for Ice I on which it expands with decreasing temperature.
Most substances do not expand when frozen, and this likely includes pure oil. If the oil contains water, it will experience some expansion. Other elements that expand on freezing are silicon, antimony, bismuth, and gallium.
No, oil does not expand when it freezes. There is no water included in oil, therefor it does not expand.
No, baby oil does not expand when frozen because water is not included in oil.
Yes, water does expand when it is frozen. That is why so many water pipes bust during the winter
Yes, the water does expand. Because it expands, it becomes less dense. That is why ice cubes float.
no
you should MICROWAVE it. BAM
No. Most liquids contract when they freeze. Water is unique in that it expands.
twice as much
Oil and water do not mix. Since ice is made of frozen water, it floats on oil because it will not mix with it and also because ice is relatively light
no
If the food has water in it then it will expand.
no it don't
No. They expand.
Any liquid or solid shrinks when frozen; the molecules contract. Molecules expand when thawed.
Yes
poo
When any liquid is frozen it expands. This is because solids take up more space than liquids, however if the cooking oil being used has a freezing point that is lower than the temperature of the freezer in use then it won't freeze & expand.
you should MICROWAVE it. BAM
Contract.
Oil does expand when heated and contracts when cooled.
No jelly does not expand because its particles are not being frozen.