They are virtually the same
Mass of ice less than that of water.Weight (other than in space) of ice less than that of water. Volume of both the same. Density of ice less than that of water.
This is because you are not changing the mass of the water, there are still the same amount of molecules in the cup, although more energized they still occupy [relatively] the same amount of room. I say relatively, because the molecules are slightly more spaces, due to the energy obtained with heat.
It depends how much water and how much ice you hae. if you have 1 ice cube and 6 cups of water, the water will weigh more. But, if you have 10 ice cubes and 1/4 cup of water the ice will weigh more.
no it has more
Hello,Ice does have the same mass as water before it melts. You can (almost) never lose or gain mass without adding orsubtractingmass from the system. Mass just can't appear ordisappearfromnowhere.According in water the volume that ice occupies is greater than that of water due to the arrangements of the molecules of ice. This is why you would be led to thinkthereis a change in mass.However, according to this Law of conservation of mass, the number of particles in an ice cube and water are the same. Only the state has changed, not the mass.
Yes, crushed ice will melt faster in a cup of water than in a cup by itself. This is because the water is a higher temperature than the ice.
Water has a greater density than ice. When water freezes, it expands, which means the same amount of H20 is taking up more space. Since density is a ratio of the amount of matter in an object (mass) to how much space it takes up (volume), if something is larger in size and has the same mass as something smaller in size, the smaller thing will always have more density than the larger thing.
Though ice is less dense than water but still more of an iceberg is below water due to enormous mass of the iceberg...
Because the ice is colder than cold water.
If you are asking if a cup filled with water and ice, when the ice melts, will the water overflow, then the answer is no. As the ice becomes water, then it loses its ability to displace the water that it was first displacing as it was ice. So in the end, the water level won't raise or fall as the ice melts, it just replaces the space it once filled with water, leaving you with a full cup of water.
No. Only the volume[size] changes.
Heat