I think you need to try this. Put water in the freezer and see what happens.
Thermal energy in the water is transferred to the air in the freezer, mainly by convection. From there, it is absorbed by the evaporator coils which line the interior of the freezer; the refrigerant fluid in the coils circulates to the outside, where it is compressed and the heat is dissipated into the room as it passes through the condenser coils on the outside of the freezer.
yes, this is why if you put a filled to the brim cup of water in the freezer, it overflows when it is frozen....
Water expands when it freezes.
Depends on temperature of freezer.
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It goes into the cup.
If the cup plus the wood weighs less than all the water that the cup could hold, then the whole thing will float in the water. If the cup plus the wood weighs more than all the water that the cup could hold, then the whole thing will sink in the water. But, after the cup fills with water, the two blocks of wood will float on the surface, while the cup goes to the bottom.
This is an experiment. it will change from liquid to solid.
Water is an amorphous liquid; it takes the form of any structure that contains it. Pouring water into a cup would result in a cup filled with "cup-shaped" water.
what you think happens to the frazen cup of water tat melts will it be the same amount of water as originally had
no
It plumps up then goes back down and comes up again and it will keep doing that