The mass of 29, 35 mL of water at 4 Celsius degrees is 29,349 178 2 g.
at -4 degrees celsius if the water is a solid state of matter,it will turn into a liquid
Mass % of CHCl3 = 15x10-4 %
The water become a solid (ice) and the volume increase.
Water is at a minimum temperature when it is frozen, which is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees FahrenheitFrom my high school memory, I recalled that water has minimum volume when at 4 degrees Celcius. This is why it is able to penetrate rocks as it is cooling and then crack them apart once it freezes again.Then I found this site http://www.simetric.co.uk/si_water.htmwhich statesAt 4°C pure water has a density (weight or mass) of about 1 g/cu.cm, 1 g/ml,1 kg/litre, 1000 kg/cu.m, 1 tonne/cu.m or 62.4 lb/cu.ftandWhen water freezes it expands rapidly adding about 9 % by volume. Fresh water has a maximum density at around 4° Celsius. Water is the only substance where the maximum density does not occur when solidified. As ice is lighter than water, it floats.
That's the point of maximum density.
depends on the temperature. for pure water at 4 degree centigrade it must be 10 gm.
4 kg is the mass of the water. Thus, 4 kg of water has a mass of 4 kg.
at -4 degrees celsius if the water is a solid state of matter,it will turn into a liquid
1
In 4 degree celsius the density of water is high at the level . And it unit in SI is 1000kg\m and in CGS 1g\cm
The mass is 17 g.
No, ice is less dense compared to water. Particularly at 4 degree Celcius the water would have its maximum density. As temperature falls below 4 degree then the density starts decreasing.
Yes it contract and the expansion from 4 to 0 degrees is due to the crystallisation of water molecules.
At 4 degrees C, 175 ml of pure water would have mass of 175 g.
Mass % of CHCl3 = 15x10-4 %
Expands
8kg