Yes, with the addition of a solute or by increasing the pressure water can be kept liquid below its normal freezing point.
Water can also be supercooled, but will freeze instantly if it is disturbed.
It could be salt water, which has a lower freezing point that regular water.
it definitely couldn't be regular water but you never know! :D
If some quantity of ethylene glycol (antifreezing agent) is added to water then water may be cooled down below its normal freezing point without formation of ice.
Adding salt makes the water denser so it will stay as liquid!
This is possible when the water is salted (or saline) water.
I think it freezes
Frozen
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 23 is 9 below that.
No. Hail is frozen water (solid), and rain is liquid water. Since water freezes and melts at 0 degrees, liquid water would have to be warmer than frozen water.
Water freezes at 0oC Centigrade, as this temperature scale was based on the changing state of water i.e. freezing and boiling points.
Yes. Snow is basically frozen rain. Water freezes at 32 degrees F.
a solid; frozen
The temperature must be below 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Yes but not flowing water since it's probably frozen on the dark side since the dark side is below -100 degrees
It can freeze in mid-air if the temp. is below 32 degrees. Best is when it is below 0 degrees
Frozen.
The Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica can support liquid water temperatures to about 27 degrees F, below which the water is frozen. You can decide if this makes the water 'cold'.
Any river can freeze when the temparature of the water drops below 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit). Even the famous Niagara Falls has frozen a couple of times during very cold weather.
32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius
Celsius: no, it boils Degrees: frozen solid
32 degrees F
Frozen because water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit
Yes, water freezes at any temperature at or below 32 degrees F. If you are referring to Celsius water freezes at any temperature at or below 0 degrees C. So, either way you are measuring you end up with frozen water/ice. Just to be clear in case the subzero temperatures terminology is giving you trouble. Subzero temperatures are temps below 0 degrees.