Water is always H2O whether it is hot water, cold water, ice, or steam.
Water is H2O no matter what temperature it is, hot or cold. H2O Cold
Hot water typically consists of H2O molecules and salt. Cold water with salt is also made up of H2O molecules and dissolves the salt in its solution.
NO!!!! You completely misunderstand. H2O is WATER , be it solid water (ICE) , liquid water , or water vapour (STEAM). H2O is the chemical formula for water, which is two hydrogen atoms combined to one oxygen atom. CO2 is CARBON DIOXIDE, be it gas or solid(DRY ICE). . CO2 is the chemical formula for carbon dioxide, which is two oxygen atoms combined to one carbon atom. Carbon dioxide has the unique ability to SUBLIMATE. That is on cooling it changes state diractly from a GAS to a SOLID. It does NOT go through a liquid state. Dry Ice and Water Ice look very similar as white/clear crystals. Solid Carbon Dioxide , DRY ICE, is ALWAYS referred to as Dry Ice, not just Ice. H2O & CO2 are completely different substances, with completely different characteristics, be it chemical or physical.
No, H2O is the chemical formula for water, indicating that each molecule consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. C2O does not represent cold water; instead, there is no standard chemical formula for cold water. The temperature of water (hot or cold) is not indicated by its chemical formula.
H2O is water. It can be almost any temperature.
No, cold water is not hot. Cold water is at a lower temperature than hot water.
Water can be either hot or cold depending on the temperature. Water at room temperature is considered neither hot nor cold.
yes
HOT rises COLD sinks
Hot water is less denser than cold water and has a greater temperature.
Hot water is less denser than cold water and has a greater temperature.
Cold water