It's somewhere in the textbook...
Downward - to the bottom of the sea.
its according to what other temperature of water you are comparing it to. water is densest at 4 degrees C so water that is colder then 4 degrees C is technically less dense then water at 4C. in that case the warmer water is denser. but if you mean warm water to be >4C and cold water to be colder then warm water, but not below 4C, then cold water is more dense then warm water. but the question you are probably trying to get answered would have an answer of cold is denser
Yes, because the higher the temperature, the faster and more spread out the molecules, therefore making hot water less dense than cold water.
higher Because... temperature affects the level as warm water provides less bouyancy, being less dense than cold water. The salinity of water also affects the level, fresh water being less dense than salty water
If you have ever heard of the expression, "Hot air rises and cold air sinks." than the principle is the same. When you heat up water, the particles begin to move faster and farther apart causing the same volume of liquid to become lighter.
Yes, it would.
cold ocean water is more dense than warm water
Cold water is more dense.
Cold salty water will be the most dense.
more dense
Cold salty water will be the most dense.
Cold salty water will be the most dense.
Cold and dense
cold ocean waer has more dense than warm water.
Water is most dense at 4° C and so because water at cold temperatures has a greater mass per volume it will sink below warmer water.
At the poles.
As water eats up, it expands. There is still the same amount of water, but now in a larger space so it is less dense than cold water.
As water eats up, it expands. There is still the same amount of water, but now in a larger space so it is less dense than cold water.