Expands
Question makes no sense - unanswerable. Nothing changes mass when heated or cooled.
you weigh the water
The weight of the bottle with the water minus the mass of bottle gives the weight of the water present.Mass/Volume=Density,therefore weight of the water/density gives the volume of water present in the bottle which is nothing but the volume of the bottle itself.
the volume increases, the same way water takes up more room then ice.
the water becomes saltier and denser and its common near the shore.
becomes the mass of clouds.....
Question makes no sense - unanswerable. Nothing changes mass when heated or cooled.
you weigh the water
Nothing happens to the mass when its cooled (or heated).Mass is the same (law of Conservation of Mass).Volume can change, though, which affects density (since mass is constant).
The weight of the bottle with the water minus the mass of bottle gives the weight of the water present.Mass/Volume=Density,therefore weight of the water/density gives the volume of water present in the bottle which is nothing but the volume of the bottle itself.
The mass of water vapour in a given quantity of air to the maximum mass of water vapour that it could hold - at the specific temperature and pressure.
The object will dissolve in the container of water.
the volume increases, the same way water takes up more room then ice.
the water becomes saltier and denser and its common near the shore.
Absolute humidity
Yes, the hotter atoms are, the faster they more.
For a given mass, steam will have more energy than water. The difference is called the 'heat of vaporization'. One thing to be carefuls about, of course, is that a given mass of steam will occupy much more volume than the same mass of water.