Not really. Snow is minute particles of ice loosely joined together, and when you pack it together hard, all the particles of ice come together and makes one big lump of ice.
Another thing;
If it was liquid, it would be called rain, not snow.
Solid until it melts.
Snow and ice are water in solid forms.
Water Vapour = Gas
Water = Liquid
Snow and Ice = Solids
It is a solid. If you look at it closely, you will see that snow is made up of ice; and ice is a solid.
solid
it is frozen water (frozen liquid) therefore it is a solid
It quickly melts back to water when in your hands
NO, snow is a delicate form of ice, definitely a solid.
Solid until it melts. Snow and ice are water in solid forms.
First, its a solid, when it melts its a liquid
liquid
A solid.
Rain, hail and snow are all forms of precipitation.
Solid (ice, snow), Liquid (just plain water), Gas (fog, clouds).
Liquid water changes to water vapor in a process called evaporation. Evaporation is defined as the spontaneous change of liquid molecules into a gasseous state.
Sublimation is what happens when a solid transitions directly to a gas without going through the liquid state. This is what happens when you see the amount of snow decrease even when it isn't melting.
The processes that occur in the water cycle: precipitation: when liquid or solid water falls from clouds transpiration: water evaporating out of plants condensation: when water vapor changes into liquid evaporation: when liquid becomes gas
liquid
yes because it is made out of snow which is a liquid
Because it is a frozen liquid, and since it is frozen it isn't liquid.
Both
Snow, and anything made out of snow, is solid; when it melts it becomes liquid.
Liquid
yes it turns into water
yes,any liquid does
heat
Some manufacturers put antifreeze in the snow globe liquid to prevent the liquid from freezing during shipping. Antifreeze could cause damage to the kidneys. Do not allow children to drink the liquid from snow globes. Pets can be poisoned as well, so keep them away if a snow globe breaks. Additional information: Snow globes made in the United States after 2000 will typically use a safer liquid. They do not use anti-freeze which is toxic to pets and humans.
The answer is melting
liquid water