if you are talking about the same glass that had water in it and THEN froze, then my friend the weight is the same. Ofcourse this is correct only if while freezing, no water spilled out of the glass (because ice takes up more space than water.
If you sink, then you weigh more than your volume of water.
If you float, then the volume of water you displaced weighs the same as you weigh.
Depends on what the liquid is. Molten lead weighs more than water, which weighs more than gasoline does. A cup of liquid is the same as 8 fluid ounces, but they are measuring a volume, not a weight.
What are you putting it in? In a liquid with a high enough specific gravity it certainly will float. A small flake of it will float on water as well, supported by the surface tension of the water.
A gallon of gravy weighs more than a gallon of water, due to the fact it has a higher density.
Not enough information. You would also have to know either the volume, or the density, of the object.
You dont. A cubic meter is a measure of volume. A ton is a unit of weight. How do you convert the size of a class room to a ton? You don't. Now how do you covert the weight of a cubic meter of water to a ton? That would be a question that has an answer. A cubic meter of water weighs 1000 kg, or a metric ton. A Kilogram is equal to about 2.2 pounds. So a metric ton is equal to about 2200 poins or about 1.1 tons. A cubic meter of water weighs about 1.1 tons.
No, cold water weighs more (for a given volume) than hot water. This is why there is a thermocline in bodies of water. But when water freezes, the solid form weighs even less (for a given volume), this is why ice floats.
Sand and water both have weight and both have volume. A cup (volume) of sand weighs more than an equal volume of water. So the sand pushes the water out of the way and sinks. A cup of wood chips weighs less than an equal volume of water. So the water pushes the wood chips out of the way and they float. Try it and see.
10 ml of water has 10 c.c. volume
1 cm3 of water weighs 1 gram. The volume is...ermm... 1 cm3
No. Density says how much it weighs per volume unit, like kilo per liter.An example is that lead has higher density than water (weighs more per liter), but a lot of water still weighs more (is more massive) than a little lead.
One liter of water weighs more than 1 liter of ice. This is because water expands when it is frozen, thus the liquid water will have more water compared to the ice.
Depends on what the liquid is. Molten lead weighs more than water, which weighs more than gasoline does. A cup of liquid is the same as 8 fluid ounces, but they are measuring a volume, not a weight.
It depends on the volume of the cup. 1L of water weighs 1kg.
Yes
For an object to flat it must displace more water than it weighs. So a 1 kg hollow steel ball bust displace 1kg of water. 1 kg of water has a volume of 1 litre so the steel ball must have a volume greater than 1l. Note: 1lite = 1000cm^3
Boats displace water (push it out of the way). The boat weighs less than the water it displaces, so it floats on top. If the boat weighed more than the water is displaces, it would sink- which is how a submarine goes under water.
1 cc water weighs 1 gm, any other unit volume will be a multiple or fraction of that.