Yes. Freezing a liquid simply slows the rate at which the molecules travel, it does not add or subtract anything at a molecular level. So a liquid weighs the same as before when it is frozen.
So if you melt an ice cube, it will weigh the same in liquid form as it did before it melted. This would change slightly if a high amount of evaporation occurred, but a liter of liquid water will weigh the same once it is frozen.
The difference in weight between ice and water is that ice is less dense than water, so a given volume of ice weighs less than the same volume of water.
An ice bottle is heavier than a water bottle because ice has a higher density than water. The same volume of ice will weigh more than the same volume of liquid water because ice molecules are more tightly packed together. When water freezes into ice, it expands and becomes more compact, leading to greater weight in the same space.
The water level remains the same when a piece of ice floating in a cylinder of water melts because the ice displaces its own weight in water. The increase in water volume due to the melting ice is equal to the volume previously displaced by the ice.
When ice melts, it remains at the same level because the density of ice is less than the density of water. This is in accordance with Archimedes' Principle, which states that an object will displace its own weight in fluid when submerged, and the weight of the displaced fluid is equal to the weight of the object. The water level does not change because the melted ice displaces the same volume of water as the ice itself, maintaining equilibrium.
A cup of water and a cup of ice would have the same volume and mass because they fill the cup to the same level. However, the cup of ice would have a lower density than the cup of water because ice is less dense than liquid water due to its expanded crystal structure.
Water's weight, when frozen into ice stays the same, but the density of water is much higher than ice's, since Ice has the same weight and contents of Water, but takes up significantly more space.
The weight of the water will stay the same whether ice, water or steam, because the mass has not changed.
It is not. It varies slightly. The volume of ice will be larger than with water when water and ice are the same weight.
The difference in weight between ice and water is that ice is less dense than water, so a given volume of ice weighs less than the same volume of water.
When ice cube is submerged on water...The upthrust created on the ice cube by water is equal to the weight of the displaced water...when the ice cube is melting its volume changes but its weight remains the same and its exactly equal to the weight of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen...therefore the 'volume of of melted water' fits exactly to the 'volume of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen'... So the water level does not change! -Shenal K Mendis ;)
An ice bottle is heavier than a water bottle because ice has a higher density than water. The same volume of ice will weigh more than the same volume of liquid water because ice molecules are more tightly packed together. When water freezes into ice, it expands and becomes more compact, leading to greater weight in the same space.
The melting of ice represents a change of state (solid to liquid). When ice melts, nothing "disappears" from where it melted. The mass of the water is the same as that of the ice. Think of it in terms of molecules of water - the number stays the same and the mass will be the same. So, with the same force pulling those molecules down (gravity), there is no reason for mass to change as everything is still there. It's like weighing an apple, smashing it up, and weighing it again. It'll stay (roughly) the same. Thankyou for the answer on my homework
You cannot gain weight by eating ice. Ice is water and water is used to hydrate the body. This may actually help you lose weight.
The water level remains the same when a piece of ice floating in a cylinder of water melts because the ice displaces its own weight in water. The increase in water volume due to the melting ice is equal to the volume previously displaced by the ice.
When ice melts, it remains at the same level because the density of ice is less than the density of water. This is in accordance with Archimedes' Principle, which states that an object will displace its own weight in fluid when submerged, and the weight of the displaced fluid is equal to the weight of the object. The water level does not change because the melted ice displaces the same volume of water as the ice itself, maintaining equilibrium.
Because the quantity of water molecules stays the same. The volume changes, water is more dense than ice.
100g of water is equal to 100g of ice in terms of weight, since they both have the same mass. However, the volume of the ice may be slightly larger due to the lower density of ice compared to water.