A change of phase from the liquid water to solid water (ice); the physical properties are of course different. The molecules in the unfrozen water are moving fast, but as it starts to cool off, the molecules begin to slow down until they don't move at all, thus, freezing.
I'm going out on a limb here but.... it freezes?
When you cool water to its freezing point, it turns into a solid (ice). As it turns from a liquid (water) to a solid (ice), it's called freezing. Pretty obvious really.
It turns to ice.
it freezes
-16 degrees Celsius is 28.8 degrees below freezing (3.2 degrees Fahrenheit).
-10 degrees Celsius = 14 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 Degrees F and below = For Fahrenheit Below 0 degrees in Celsius
if im not mistaken it freezes.
-25 degrees Fahrenheit is -31.67 degrees Celsius.
It freezes.
it freezes
It becomes solid water.
-16 degrees Celsius is 28.8 degrees below freezing (3.2 degrees Fahrenheit).
-10 degrees Celsius = 14 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, 30 degrees Celsius is 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 Degrees F and below = For Fahrenheit Below 0 degrees in Celsius
-5 degrees Fahrenheit = -20.5 degrees Celsius.
if im not mistaken it freezes.
-25 degrees Fahrenheit is -31.67 degrees Celsius.
-180 degrees Celsius = -292 degrees Fahrenheit
Students are measuring the temperatures of two substances in a chemistry lab. Substance A is 5 degrees Celsius below 0 degrees Celsius. Substance B is 9 degrees Celsius below 0 degrees Celsius. Which statement is true?