If you are talking about the exact same quantity of molecules, these changes don't affect the weight. Things like density and buoyancy may change, but not the weight.
It depends!!When you turn water from liquid to solid, it doesn't requires heat.It is so called SOLIDIFICATION.Then if liquid to gas,the liquid requires more heat inorder for it to become a water vapor...The process is called EVAPORATION..™J-Neil™
Matter will only change from a liquid to a solid when you take away heat.If a liquid turns into a solid when you ADD heat, then something else is happening. It could be a chemical reaction or a more simple example would be if you heat a mixture of something that has water in it and the water evaporates. What is left behind is whatever did not evaporate and could be a solid. This is technically not the same matter that you had before, so you can't say the matter turned into a solid from a liquid by adding heat.
Solids are more dense than liquids. This is because of their atomic or molecular configuration. Atoms or molecules in solids are more closely arranged compared to atoms or molecules in liquids.
No. In cooking we use dry measure and liquid measure and they are not interchangeable. If you wanted equal amounts of water and dirt you would have to weigh them for them to be the same because water is more dense it weighs more than dirt.
1g water vapour occupies the greatest volume - even at high pressure. 1g of liquid water occupies the least volume. 1g of solid ice is greater volume than liquid water - and this is the only common liquid where the solid is of less volume than the liquid state.
Obviously frozen water. Its a solid after being frozen so it has become a solid. Actually it weighs the same I have conducted this experiment for my science fair and found that they weigh the same.
The things that happens to the energy level of solid as it become liquid water is that the liquid has more energy than solid do. Simple as that! BY: ANONYMOUS :)
they both weigh one pound
the buoyant force of the liquid on the solid is more than the buoyant force of the air on the solid.
Solid water, ice, is less dense than liquid water and floats on top. The solid state of other substances is more dense than the liquid state and will sink in the liquid.
It sinks in the liquid. A steel bolt has a density greater that that of water. Drop it in water, it sinks.
Yes. Changing from liquid to gas is called vaporization, and requires more energy (in water) than to change from solid to liquid, which is called fusion.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.