By frozen water, I guess that you meant water at 0 degrees Celsius, compared with water at the room temperature of 25 degrees Celsius. The densities are 999.8395 kg/m^3 and 997.0479 kg/m^3, at 0 and 25 degrees C, respectively. In the US, one gallon is equivalent to 231 in^3, or 3.79 L, or 3.79E-3 m^3. The weight difference = (999.8395-997.0479)*3.79E-3 kg = 0.0106 kg = 0.023 lb.
If there was a gallon of water before it was frozen then it weighs the same. Fresh water has a density of 1Kg/liter Water ice has a density of 0.9167Kg/l A gallon is a volume measurement, so a gallon of ice weighs less than a gallon of water. The short answer is about 380 grammes or 13.5 Oz.
yes because the size of the molecules change therefore so does the weightCounterpoint:No, a gallon of water would weigh the same if it were frozen into a "gallon" of ice. The molecules do not change size, they simply do not move as fast and stick together when they are frozen. Therefore nothing is added or subtracted at a molecular level, and the weight of a liquid is the same whether it is frozen or solid.Water has a density of 1.00 gram/cubic centimeter.Ice, on the other hand, has a density of 0.931 gram/cubic centimeter.(As the volume is equal, and mass = density x volume)[Water will be heavier.]
Depends greatly on the chemical: a gallon of helium or hydrogen will have negative weight, while a gallon of lead would be too heavy to lift.
It is roughly the same as the weight of a gallon of water, because the bouyancy force is equal to the weight of water displaced (the weight of the air being negligible). A UK gallon of water weighs almost exactly 10 pounds, while a US gallon weighs about 8.35 pounds.
A US gallon of 90 weight oil weighs approximately 6.8 pounds. An Imperial gallon of 90 weight oil weigh approximately 8 pounds.
Freezing or thawing does not change weight.
If there was a gallon of water before it was frozen then it weighs the same. Fresh water has a density of 1Kg/liter Water ice has a density of 0.9167Kg/l A gallon is a volume measurement, so a gallon of ice weighs less than a gallon of water. The short answer is about 380 grammes or 13.5 Oz.
nope
no difference
The mass of water is with 20-30 % higher.
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yes because the size of the molecules change therefore so does the weightCounterpoint:No, a gallon of water would weigh the same if it were frozen into a "gallon" of ice. The molecules do not change size, they simply do not move as fast and stick together when they are frozen. Therefore nothing is added or subtracted at a molecular level, and the weight of a liquid is the same whether it is frozen or solid.Water has a density of 1.00 gram/cubic centimeter.Ice, on the other hand, has a density of 0.931 gram/cubic centimeter.(As the volume is equal, and mass = density x volume)[Water will be heavier.]
1 gallon of beer gives 10.66 12-oz. glasses of beer 1 gallon of water gives 16 8-oz. cups of water, of course. :)
The weight per a us gallon of diesel is about 7.49 lb.
Weight of 25% sulfuric acid per gallon
50kg is the weight of a gallon of condenced milk
salt water has more mass because of the added salt so salt is heavier :)