The liquid has the same mass but less volume than the ice.
These volumes are not identical.
Usually, a liquid is less dense than a solid, so when a solid melts its volume increases. However, this is not true for water or water-based liquids, because the H bonds make liquid water highly structured and therefore denser than expected.
It melts into liquid (water)
from a solid into a liquid.
No. When water freezes and becomes ice, it expands. This causes it to have greater volume. If you were to melt down ice, the volume you would measure afterwards (in liquid form) would be lass than the volume of the actual solid ice.
The volume decreases. Ice is less dense than water. Put another way, a given weight of water can be stored in a smaller volume than the same weight of ice. Another possible, but also possibly less helpful, answer is that ice cubes get smaller as they melt because they lose content as the water in them runs off as a liquid.
Usually, a liquid is less dense than a solid, so when a solid melts its volume increases. However, this is not true for water or water-based liquids, because the H bonds make liquid water highly structured and therefore denser than expected.
5 mL of water vapor would occupy significantly less volume as a liquid. All gasses occupy more space than their liquid counterparts as the extra energy of gaseous states drive the molecules further apart.
Water liquid melts faster because denisty of juice is more compared to water. Hence the Water liquid melts sooner.
1g water vapour occupies the greatest volume - even at high pressure. 1g of liquid water occupies the least volume. 1g of solid ice is greater volume than liquid water - and this is the only common liquid where the solid is of less volume than the liquid state.
The answer would depend on the pressure attained by the cooker.
Liquid phase: liquid water
water is a solid then it melts now it is a liquid
Ice in its frozen state has agreater area than liquid water, however as ice melts it does expand, before returning to its smaller area. Water is unique in that it expands when freezing, and again when melting (thus bursting water pies) but does not reatin the volume as a liquid.
Liquid phase: liquid water
It melts into liquid (water)
Water
ice which then melts to become water. solid to liquid.