Freezes too. It is very difficult for a canal to freeze because moving water is not likely to turn to ice
The crack would expand because the water in the rock, as it freezes, expands.
the screen would crack
Hot Water
Yes, simply refreeze the water. Leave a bottle of water outside on a freezing night, it will be solid ice in the morning. The same would happen if the bottle of water was put into a freezer.
Not as much as I would of thought. Normal water freezes at 0 degrees and lower. Salt water freezes at about -2digrees,(-1.93 to be exact)
If water is allowed to get into a concrete sidewalk and not allowed to drain and it freezes, the expansion of the water/ice as it crystallizes causes the concrete to crack. If more water settles in the crack and freezes, the crack gets bigger. Each year the increase in the size of the crack is greater because a greater amount of water can fit in the crack, and a greater amount of water has a greater amount of expansion when it freezes.
water can't actually reach that temperature because temperature is actually a measurement of how fast the particles in an object are moving. once they reach boiling point (100) the water particles cant go any faster and so they evaporate and change into a gas. if you left the water on the heat then it would eventually all evaporate and there would be nothing left in the container. if you put a lid on the container it would explode because the particle's would have no where to escape.
The water would expand as it freezes, causing the crack to widen. This repeated process of water entering the crack, freezing, and expanding, would eventually lead to the rock fracturing or breaking apart.
The answer would be Celsius.
The most popular attraction in Ottawa would probably be the Canal Rideau. During the warmer months it is enjoyed as a site to see the infamous rushing water and in the winter it is used as the world's largest skating rink when it freezes over.
It is very cold water. At normal pressure, it is as cold as water can get before it starts to freeze.
No. The same would be when water melts or freezes. It is still water.