no, when water freezes it becomes less dense, that is why ice floats.
Cold Water. Water expands when it freezes, which makes ice less dense.
Water is denser than ice because the molecules in water are closer together and more tightly packed, while in ice, the molecules are arranged in a more open and spaced-out structure, causing ice to be less dense than liquid water.
Ice is denser than water because when water freezes and turns into ice, the water molecules arrange themselves in a hexagonal structure, causing them to be more spread out and take up more space, making ice less dense than liquid water.
The question is not "how cold" but "how dense". Obviously it was cold enough to be frozen but this is also glacial ice. Glacial ice is not frozen water. It's densely compacted snow, so it's six times denser than the ice in your freezer.
Sound travels faster in water than in ice or steam. This is because sound waves travel faster through denser materials, and water is denser than both ice and steam.
Sound travels faster in ice water compared to steam. This is because sound waves travel faster in denser mediums, and ice water is denser than steam. So, the speed of sound in ice water is faster than in steam.
Ice water is typically around 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius). The temperature of ice water affects its properties by causing it to be solid and rigid, as opposed to liquid water which is more fluid. The cold temperature also slows down molecular movement, making ice water denser than liquid water.
because ice is denser than the water durt de dur
Water expands when it freezes. Ice is lighter and denser than liquid water. Ice Floats! Most substances get denser when they turn from liquid to solid.
its according to what other temperature of water you are comparing it to. water is densest at 4 degrees C so water that is colder then 4 degrees C is technically less dense then water at 4C. in that case the warmer water is denser. but if you mean warm water to be >4C and cold water to be colder then warm water, but not below 4C, then cold water is more dense then warm water. but the question you are probably trying to get answered would have an answer of cold is denser
As water gets colder it eventually becomes ice. So judging by that, as water gets colder the water gets denser to the point of being a solid. Cold water is more dence than warm water. Ice is less dense than water (which is why it floats) so... but I think the above is still correct.
Liquid water is denser than ice,Ice floats on top of liquid water.