This depends greatly upon the temperature the water. At 4oC the density is approximately 1000 kg/m3 (or 1 g/cm3) - more acurately though the density would be 999.97 kg/m3 (or 0.9997 g/cm3).
Values for the density of pure water (H2O) have been calculated over a wide range of temperatures. At room temperature (22oC) The density of water is 997.77 kg/m3 (or 0.99777 g/cm3).
Scientific room temperature is 26.85 oC , 80.33 oF 300 K.
So, the temperature of water at room temperatures is 26.85 oC , 80.33 oF 300 K.
Added:
Room temperature is NOT a scientific defined or standardised temperature.
Mostly used values are 20oC, 25oC, 70 oF, 75 oF, 293 K, 298 K, 300 K which ALL are different!
From Wikipedia: The viscosity of water is 8.90 × 10−4 Pa·s or 8.90 × 10−3 dyn·s/cm2 or 0.890 cP at about 25 °C.
Liquid. Water freezes at zero degrees Celsius and boils to turn into vapor at one hundred degrees Celsius.
1 ml of water masses 1 gram
water boils at 100o C.but room temperature may not rise to that much. only after boiling it may be converted to the gaseous state.
If it were a solid at room temperature, then that would be the state of matter. However, hydrogen is NOT solid at room temperature. It is a gas and that would be the state of matter.
Room temperature air. The water keeps it fresher.
This is an experiment. it will change from liquid to solid.
At room temperature krypton is a gas.
It means whether the substance in question is solid, liquid or gas at normal room temperature, so you could assume that about 20 degrees celsius. Oxygen is a gas at room temperature Water is a liquid at room temperature Iron is a solid at room temperature.
water
yes
water boils at 100o C.but room temperature may not rise to that much. only after boiling it may be converted to the gaseous state.
Germanium at room temperature is in the state of a Solid
The state of silicon at room temperature is SOLID State.
Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.
Solid state in room temperature.
solid at room temperature
solid at room temperature
is a white solid at room temperature also known as milk of magnesia.It is insoluble in water and is also a strong electrolyte.
Bromine is in its liquid state of matter at room temperature.