it's called a temperature below 0 degrees C. I don't believe there is a pressure. And I believe the usual word for solid water would be ice.
--- this is not the answer i was looking for. i was looking for the amount of compressive force required to create a solid from fresh water.
No, water in a solid form is most commonly referred to as ice. Physical conditions such as temperature and pressure are required for water to transition into a solid state.
pressure reducing valve is required.
If you put pressure on ice it will melt.
Artesian wells rely on natural pressure within the underground aquifer to bring water to the surface without the need for pumping. This pressure is created by the weight of the overlying rock layers that confine the water in the aquifer. When a well is drilled into the confined aquifer, the pressure forces the water up through the well to the surface.
possible head gasket
Solid, assuming normal atmospheric pressure.
Water can exist in three states: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor). The state of water depends on its temperature and pressure.
Warm water is warm because the molcules heat up and make friction they move around much faster when an object is a liquid then a solid. Cold water is in the process of becoming a solid the molecules will slow down and compact to compact molecules need coldness and when something is warming up it is melting and needs heat to melt. duh.
A depth of approximately 10 meters is required in sea water for 1 bar pressure. This is because each meter of water depth exerts a pressure of approximately 0.1 bar due to the weight of the water above it.
ice comes from water which water comes from air.. oxygen is a gas which changes to water which is a liquid then to ice which is a solid liquid Dry ice is solid Carbon dioxide, which is usually a gas at standard temperature and pressure. Normal ice is solid water, which is normally a liquid at standard temperature and pressure.
Water is a solid at all temperatures from 0 degrees C downwards. That is at normal atmospheric pressure.
It depends on the pressure.Okay, it doesn't depend ALL THAT MUCH on the pressure; at anything even remotely approximating normal atmospheric pressure it will be a solid.