Water is denser in its liquid phase than its solid phase. It is at its densest just a couple of degrees above freezing, and it expands just a bit as it freezes. That's why ice floats, and why freezing water can be so destructive.
Superfluid phases (like bose-einstein condensate or fermionic condensate) are more dense than solids.
the solid pahse??? idk i have the same question for earth science and this is all i could find.
The solid phase of matter would generally be the most dense.
Liquid phase :)
A basic answer is that the densest ocean water is the saltiest - a ship floats higher in salt water (sea) than in fresh water (lake). Also cold water tends to sink towards the ocean floor, or may form a layer mid way.
Because when water seeps into cracks and freezes, the material gets pushed outwards, because water exapands as it freezes. This process is called ice wedging.
Ice has a lower density than water.
Badlands
Salt water will erode earth material much more quicker.
Iridium is the densest material known.
salt water is densest
Polar regions produce the densest waters because of the cooling and freezing there.
when rocks are thrown in it
About 4 degrees centgrade.
Liquid water is the densest form.
It floats because its less densest than water
The densest liquid at room temperature is Mercury which is 13.5 times heavier than water.
4 degrees celsius
deep zone
The yapok is unusual because it's the only marsupial that lives in water. It has peculiar characteristics like webbed feet and water repellent fur.
liquid when it is in solid form, the molecules actually move further apart, which is unusual, since in most other cases the solid is the most dense. It is due to the structure of water molecules