Ice and water are identical in mass. (However, they have different densities and thus are different by volume, but we are not concerned with any volumes of ice so ignore this fact.)
Density of water = 1.0 g/mL 1 lb = 16 oz
16 oz (28 g/oz) = 448 g 448 g (1 mL / 1 g) = 448 mL
448 mL (0.033814 fl oz./mL) = 15.15 fl oz.
1 pound of ice/water is slightly less than 1 pint of water.
The voluime of one pound of water is 27.7 (rounded to the nearest tenth) cubic inches. Now the weight of water does not change after freezing; however, water has an expansion rate of 4% when frozen. Therefore, one pound of ice has a volume of 28.8 (rounded to the nearest tenth) cubic inches.
well its 2 pounds for one ice cube so just times it by 2* and how ever many ice cubes you have..
There are a number of variables, but it should come out pretty close to 16 ounces of liquid.
A pound is a pound is apound.
A pound for weight, a pint for volume.
Depends on the size of the cubes.
Add heat.
16 oz.
16 ounces
how much heat is required to convert 0,3kg of ice at 0c to water at the same tempture
It displaces 1 pound of water in terms of its mass, if you were to convert to volume, it is a simple conversion with any mass, water has a density of 1 meaning that 1kg of water takes up 1 litre of volume, so, a 1 pound fish roughly displaces 455mL of water.
Depends on the temperature of the water. If it is 32 degree water and you want 32 degree ice then you need a -144 BTU loss to change state from liquid to solid. It takes 1 BTU to raise the temperature of 1 pound of water 1 degree (F). If the water is 82 degrees then you would need a -50 BTU loss (+) 144 BTU to change state. TOTAL WEIGHT OF WATER (X) 1 BTU (X) Degrees desired of change. If it is ICE to WATER then it is the TEMP of ICE (X) .5 BTU (X) NUMBER OF DEGREES INCREASED = TOTAL BTU needs. If you change state in the process you have to add 144 BTU for 32 degree ICE to 32 degree WATER and 970 BTU for 212 degree WATER to 212 degree STEAM but only when you change state.
A BTU is defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of liquid water by one degree Fahrenheit. Melting a pound of ice at 32 °F requires 143 BTU. As is the case with the calorie, several different definitions of the BTU exist, which are based on different water temperatures and therefore vary by up to 0.5%:
water
Ice is lighter than water. That is why it floats on water.The term "lighter" is confusing here. A pound of water will still freeze into a pound of ice. However, the the pound of ice is less dense than the pound of water, so it floats. This gives the impression that a pound of ice is lighter than a pound of water. Well really, it depends on the quantity of both ice and water. However lets say if you had 1 kilogram of ice and 1 kilogram of water. The ice would weigh more because the particles are pulled together more and they're no longer liquid (physically) and the ice would be bigger and heavier (obviously) .
LATENT HEAT OF FUSION When one pound of ice melts, it absorbs 144 BTUs at a constant temperature of 32°F. If one pound of water is to be frozen into ice, 144 BTUs must be removed from the water at a constant temperature of 32°F.
$2.48 a pound
The cost of a ten pound bag of ice can vary from store to store and state to state. The average cost of a ten pound bag of ice as of 2014 is $2.00 to $4.00.
1 pound
Any amount of water can make an ice cube. It's not the amount that determines if water will become ice, it is the temperature. The water just needs to be at a temperature of 0oC or lower, and it will become ice.
I dont think anything can live frozen in a block of ice ...
144btus per pound in 1 hour
Your output would equal your intake so there would be no net change in body weight.If you drink ice cold water, your body will burn some calories as it warms the water up to body temperature. You would burn 175 calories if you drink one liter of ice water.3500 calories equal one pound. So if you were to drink 20 liters of ice water, you would lose 1 pound.
1 cubic yard of ice has a weight of 49421 pound-force.
I was just in Publix today and was told that the dry ice costs $1.50 a pound.
It depends how much water and how much ice you hae. if you have 1 ice cube and 6 cups of water, the water will weigh more. But, if you have 10 ice cubes and 1/4 cup of water the ice will weigh more.