If you have 100ml of water, when it turns to ice it will become about 109ml in volume, so about a 9% increase in volume after it freezes. When the temperature plummets to a much lower termperature, say -50F, the volume of the ice will decrease by a small amount, about 0.4% from the 109ml tial volume.
Yes. Since the mass remains the same, the density of ice is less than the density of liquid water and therefore ice floats on liquid water.
No (and this is exceptional) only water turning in ice it is expanding! (about 10%).
That's why ice is floating on water in the Nordic Ice Sea
Yes, it will expand.
When water turns from water into ice, it actually does expand. Depending on the salinity of the ice, it will however contract slightly (if fresh water) or it will expand slightly and then contract (as the temperature lowers). You'll notice that if your freezer is too cold, the ice cubes in the trays will actually have cracks in them, this is an example of the relief of internal pressure created by the contraction.
They will, if filled with water to capacity and the closed at the top. That is because the water will expand when it turns to ice. But normally they will not break spontaneously.
The state of the water depends on the temperature of the water and the surroundings. If the water is below freezing point, the water will begin to freeze, and thaw when the temperature rises above the freezing point.
Ice/water
Yes, for example if an ice cube (solid) melts than that water (liquid) evaporates and turns in to water vapor than the solid did turn into a gas from ice cube to water vapor.
When water turns from water into ice, it actually does expand. Depending on the salinity of the ice, it will however contract slightly (if fresh water) or it will expand slightly and then contract (as the temperature lowers). You'll notice that if your freezer is too cold, the ice cubes in the trays will actually have cracks in them, this is an example of the relief of internal pressure created by the contraction.
They will, if filled with water to capacity and the closed at the top. That is because the water will expand when it turns to ice. But normally they will not break spontaneously.
No, it turns into steam. Water turns into ice at its freezing point.
Melting ice turns the ice into water.
if water turns into ice, it will have frozen.
Melting. Think of ice. When you melt ice, it turns into a liquid, when you freeze ice it turns into a solid. Improved: Melting. Think of ice. When you melt ice, it turns into WATER (a liquid), when you freeze (ice) WATER it turns into a solid, WHICH IS CALLED 'ICE'.
I am not sure :P :The formation of ice from water (the process of freezing) can create a type of mechanical weathering called frost (or ice) wedging. Water percolates into cracks in a rock. Then as the temperature drops (perhaps overnight), the water turns to ice. The crystallization process causes the water to expand as the ice crystals develop. Tens of thousands of pounds of pressure are created as the ice forms. This force causes the crack in the rock to expand, thus breaking the rock into smaller pieces.
Because if ice melts it turns into water
water contracts when cooling until about 4 deg. C. From that temp. further cooling causes the water to expand. as it freezes it continues to expand, that is why ice floats.
ice
It turns to ice.
ice