Ice is the crystalline form of water MOLECULES
an atom has gas,dust and ice. In the middle there is a small nucleus
Technically, yes but literally no. even though the ice linear is moleculetic it is within no range of ice atom bombs such as ak 47
ice steam and water
Yes, ice contains hydrogen bonds. In ice, water molecules are arranged in a specific crystalline structure that allows hydrogen bonding to occur between the oxygen atom of one water molecule and the hydrogen atom of another water molecule. These hydrogen bonds are responsible for the unique properties of ice, such as its lower density compared to liquid water.
in case of water every oxygen atom is bonded with 4 hydrogens, where as ice forms a cage like structure, in which oxygen atom is linked to 3 hydrogens. This difference in structure makes ice less denser than water, hence icebergs floats on sea water.
Proton
Hydrogen bonding is the intermolecular force found in water molecules in ice. This occurs when the partially positive hydrogen atom of one water molecule is attracted to the partially negative oxygen atom of another water molecule.
No, ice is not a macromolecule. Ice is a solid form of water, which is a simple compound made up of two hydrogen atoms bonded to one oxygen atom. Macromolecules are large molecules made up of smaller subunits called monomers.
Ice is not a molecule, but rather a solid composed of water molecules that are arranged in a specific crystalline structure. Each water molecule in ice is made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together.
Yes. Ice is solid water. Water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen.
A non-example of an atom is a carbon atom.
yes, they are just packed tighter (more dense) in ice than dew ect (see below for more detail) If the water droplets are different sizes, they contain a different amount of molecules. One water molecule always contains 3 atoms (One oxygen, and two hydrogen). Ice (solid water) is simply water molecules bonded differently, and dew (liquid water) is free water that is held together through electromagnetism (Van Der Walls forces). Steam (gaseous water) is made of water molecules that have no attraction to eachother. The spaces between the atoms and molecules in each case differs greatly.