Mist is performed by fine droplets of liquid in a gas... so an example would be in the shower when their is white steam coming out which is basically mist.
the persin at the top is sooo WRONG. steam and mist are NOT the same.
It took about 5 hours to get the 1st cubes
While water is moving, its temperatue can drop below zero and it doesn't freeze. Obviously, faster moving rivers are less likely to freeze. For lakes, water's unique density behaviour protects them from freezing. Unlike almost all substances, the solid form of water (ice) is less dense than the liquid form. Ice cubes float. (For almost all other substances, the "cubes" would sink.) So when lakes freeze, the ice stays at the top. This insulates the remaining water from the colder air above. If ice cubes sank, then lakes could freeze all the way to the bottom: the ice that formed would fall to the bottom, continually exposing the top water to the cold air.
Ice cubes will float longer in flat pop compared to carbonated pop. Carbonation creates bubbles, which attach to the surface of the ice cube and cause it to rise to the top more quickly. With flat pop, there are fewer bubbles to lift the ice cube, so it will remain submerged for a longer period.
Pure water ice cubes always float. They float because the molecules of water rearrange into a crystalline shape when they freeze. That arrangement leaves more empty space between the molecules of water which reduces the density of the water in ice form. Lower density objects float on higher density liquids.
Ice is less dense than water because the molecules in ice are spaced out more, causing it to be less compact. This lower density allows ice to float on top of water, where it displaces an equivalent volume of water.
Ice cubes are less dense than water.
Ice cubes don't sink in water, as the density of an ice cube is less than the density of water.
It took about 5 hours to get the 1st cubes
Ice does float, but if you put in multiple ice cubes, the ice cubes underneath can't push up over and on top, so it looks like they're floating in the middle of the glass.
The top because you throw on the top first.
Ice is less dense than water and will float on water.
It's not the color that is significant, its the fresh water that the ice cubes were made with. Salt water is heavier than fresh water so the fresh water floats a top the salt water.
Ice cubes float in drinks and water because ice is less dense than liquid water. When water freezes, it forms a crystalline structure that spaces the molecules farther apart, causing the ice to have a lower density. This lower density causes the ice to float on top of the liquid.
While water is moving, its temperatue can drop below zero and it doesn't freeze. Obviously, faster moving rivers are less likely to freeze. For lakes, water's unique density behaviour protects them from freezing. Unlike almost all substances, the solid form of water (ice) is less dense than the liquid form. Ice cubes float. (For almost all other substances, the "cubes" would sink.) So when lakes freeze, the ice stays at the top. This insulates the remaining water from the colder air above. If ice cubes sank, then lakes could freeze all the way to the bottom: the ice that formed would fall to the bottom, continually exposing the top water to the cold air.
Ice cubes float in water because they are less dense than liquid water. The solid water molecules in ice are spaced farther apart than the molecules in liquid water, causing the ice to be less dense. This difference in density allows the ice cubes to float on the surface of the water rather than sink.
with sugar cubes as limestone and grahm crackers as top soil...pour water on top, and watch the sinkhole form
There is no limit to the number of cubes which can be arranged on top of a rectangular prism.