it remain the same as it has definite volume.
the water freezes and expands.
Water freezes. Ice melts.
The majority of the water freezes because water is the only molecule that doesnt sink...so the water becomes ice
Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and at 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
The answer is that the temperature a substance freezes is also its melting point. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius into ice and if you heat ice up to 0 degrees Celsius it MELTS to give you water. Evaporation is the change from liquid to gas and condensation is the change from gas to liquid (for water this happens at 100 degrees Celsius).
Water expands slightly when it freezes, so 1 cup of ice will be a little less when it turns back to water, but it is only a small change in volume, and for a rough measurement like a cupful it will hardly be noticeable
As the water freezes, it will expand.
Increases.
Water is unique. It expands in volume when heated, and also expands in volume when frozen (hence, burst water pipes (unless insulated) when there is a thaw after freezing winter weather).
No, as long as it is the same peice of ice. The volume and the density change but not the mass
Increases.
just take a cup of water and put it into the freezer.wait for about 2hourstake it out and weigh it
The volume of a beaker doesn't change, it's a beaker. What your were probably trying to ask is what happens to the volume of the ice when it melts. The volume decreases; water is special. Unlike other substances when it freezes it expands. That is why ice floats, it is less dense then water.
Yes.
Increases by about 9%. Water is one of the few liquids that expands when it freezes.
The coefficient of the thermal expansion of water is equal to .00021. Water expands by 9% of its volume when it freezes.
5-10%
it changes because when it freezes, the molecules within the water slows down thus changing the placement of it, which also changes the over size or volume of water.