no
Water will stay the same weight when it is frozen, it still has the same molecules that it started with
No, frozen water weighs the same as liquid water. When water freezes, it expands in volume but maintains the same mass, so the weight remains constant.
Pluto does have water in the form of frozen ice and methane gas and carbon monoxide. It's core is probabaly frozen ice and gas that is solid.
No. There are two main differences (and most others follow on from them): the temperature is lower so the frozen water is solid rather than liquid and the density has decreased (the same volume of water will have expanded).
pressure of the depths are the same
They are both the same because they are both frozen water.
Ice is just water in it's frozen, or solid, state.
what you think happens to the frazen cup of water tat melts will it be the same amount of water as originally had
when the water is frozen
They weigh the same
Greenland has the most frozen water. Greenland has the most frozen water.
Water on Mars exists mainly in the form of ice at the polar ice caps and underground. However, some evidence suggests that liquid water may occasionally flow on the surface during certain conditions. The thin atmosphere and low atmospheric pressure on Mars limit water from existing as a liquid in most places on the planet.