The "particles" are small bubbles, and should dissipate within a few minutes.
If you put water in your water bottle then freeze it, it will still be water when it has thawed back out.
A Comet <3
The particle theory explains how particles behave in solids, liquids, and gases. When water freezes, it expands at a rate of 9%. It can expand because the particles in water are able to move in any and all directions. However, a glass container is made of tightly-packed, very dense particles that are very strongly attached to each other. The particles in glass cannot move like the particles in water can. So when water is placed into a glass container and then frozen, it expands. The glass container cannot expand, and if there is no other place for the frozen water to expand to then it will break the glass that contains it.
Hail is generated by upper cloud wind driving frozen water particles up and through clouds. They gain a little more water, it gets frozen and when the wind can no longer carry it up it falls. The temperature on the ground doesn't effect this process much.
The bottle was full of liquid before it was frozen.
Very cold, frozen. Tundra is frozen ground.
Microwave or toaster Microwave: about 2 min
Defrosting frozen chicken tenders in the microwave is very simple. Take your chicken tenders, put them on a plate in the microwave, and turn it on.
put it in the microwave
A frozen large what?...
you should MICROWAVE it. BAM
xdunno
Yes, two litter bottles can be filled with water and frozen. The frozen water can then be put into sauces to help cool them down. Always make sure to check for any plastic that may be from the bottles.
the particles move slow
Neither cans nor bottles should be frozen. Cans will expand and deform, and bottles will crack.
Put them in the microwave
1-2 minutes depending on how powerful your microwave is
the rings around our planets are made out of icy dust particles and frozen gases