Yes, with the addition of a solute or by increasing the pressure water can be kept liquid below its normal freezing point.
Water can also be supercooled, but will freeze instantly if it is disturbed.
Yes, snow can freeze at 0 degrees Celsius. Snow is frozen water vapor that falls to the ground as precipitation, so it can maintain its frozen state at temperatures at or below freezing.
At -20 degrees Celsius, water is in the solid phase and is frozen.
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 23 is 9 below that.
Frozen water vapor refers to water vapor that has condensed and frozen into ice crystals or snow. This occurs at temperatures below freezing and is visible in weather phenomena such as snowflakes or frost.
Water at twenty degrees Celsius is in a liquid state. It is not frozen (ice) or in a gaseous state (water vapor) at this temperature.
The frozen part of water is ice. Ice is the solid state of water when it reaches a temperature below 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit).
The temperature must be below 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Hot water can be turned into frozen water by lowering its temperature below the freezing point of water, which is 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius). This can be done by placing the hot water in a freezer or exposing it to a cold environment until it solidifies into ice.
Yes, it can go below 0 degrees to minus Celsius for cooler temperatures for example it was -4°c outside
Yes, snow can freeze at 0 degrees Celsius. Snow is frozen water vapor that falls to the ground as precipitation, so it can maintain its frozen state at temperatures at or below freezing.
At -20 degrees Celsius, water is in the solid phase and is frozen.
At -5 degrees Celsius, water is in a solid state and is frozen.
When the temperature of a sample of water is -5 degrees Celsius, the water is frozen and in a solid state.
No, -90 degrees C is a measure of temperature. Some substances, like water, are solid at -90 degrees C.
Frozen.
Water is in a liquid state at 10 degrees Fahrenheit. It is below the freezing point of water, which is 32 degrees Fahrenheit, but still above its solidification point.
The Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica can support liquid water temperatures to about 27 degrees F, below which the water is frozen. You can decide if this makes the water 'cold'.