Water, as ice.
Besides water, a substance in solid form is more dense. At the least dense substance floats, HN03 will not float in liquid HN03. ;)
solid with hydrogen bonds making it less dense than its liquid form
Yes, a solid can be more dense than a liquid. Density is defined as mass per unit volume, so a solid with a higher mass per unit volume than a liquid will be more dense. An example is comparing ice (solid) to water (liquid), where ice is more dense than liquid water.
as density is equal to mass per unit volume. for any substance, volume does not remain same in its three(solid, liquid and gas) state. so density vary when volume changes for different states of a substance
If the solid is less dense than the liquid, it floats on top. If it is of relatively equal density as the liquid it forms a colloid in which the solid and the liquid solvent are still distinct and separate, but fairly equally distributed . If it is more dense than the liquid, it precipitates out, to the bottom of the liquid. ChaosRu
Besides water, a substance in solid form is more dense. At the least dense substance floats, HN03 will not float in liquid HN03. ;)
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
The gas phase is less dense than the liquid or solid phase of a substance. Density is not a property of sound.
None. Freezing will not change the mass of a substance. However, it might change the density of a substance, thus making something heavier or lighter for the same volume.Water has a lower density when frozen (ice) than when it is liquid. Therefore the same volume of ice will weigh less than the same volume of liquid water.Again, if you have a certain amount of anything and freeze it, the mass WILL NOT change!
Ice (solid water) will float easily in its liquid form due to its lower density compared to liquid water.
This depends on how dense the solid is, and how dense the liquid is.
Solid xenon is more dense than liquid xenon. Solid xenon has a higher density because its particles are closely packed together in a solid state compared to the more spread out particles in its liquid state.