Yes. As a gas, it is called water vapor, and is invisible.
As a liquid, it is called water, and as a solid, it is called ice.
Volume increases, and there is a change of phase from liquid to solid.
Roughly 68.7% of the world's fresh water is locked up in ice caps, glaciers, and permanent snow.
water is less dense as a solid than as a liquid
Approximately 68.7% of the fresh water on Earth is locked up in glaciers and ice caps. This solid state water plays a crucial role in regulating global climate and sea levels.
Fresh water in clouds is in the form of a gas, specifically water vapor. It condenses into liquid droplets within the cloud, and when these droplets combine and grow large enough, they fall to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain.
Yes, water can occur in actually all three phases: gas, liquid, and solid. Solid water would be a glacier, ice, hail, etc.
the fresh air and the salty water
because it provides us with fresh water
water
The Antarctic because frogs need a source of fresh water in which to breed and all the fresh water in the Antarctic is frozen solid.
Some examples of solid fresh water include ice cubes, snow, and glaciers. Ice can form on lakes, rivers, and oceans when the temperature drops below freezing. Snow is another form of solid fresh water that falls from the sky when atmospheric conditions are right. Glaciers are massive bodies of ice that form over years and contain a significant amount of fresh water.
An impure solid is obtained.
The freezing point of fresh water is 0° C or 32° F.
Volume increases, and there is a change of phase from liquid to solid.
The movement of water when ocean and fresh water meet is called Density currents.
yes , because oil is less denser than water
There is no fresh water in Antarctica. All the water on the continent is frozen. When heat is applied to it, it becomes fresh, potable water.