ice and water comes from the sky when its raining
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Ice, water, and steam are examples of the three states of water, i.e. solid, liquid, and gaseous.
ice, sea water, steam, fresh water
Melting wax Melting ice freazing water Evaporating the water Cooling the steam
Irreversible examples: Burning a piece of paper, baking a cake, digesting food, rusting of iron, breaking a glass. Reversible examples: Melting ice into water, boiling water into steam, freezing water into ice, dissolving sugar in water, compressing a gas into a liquid.
There is solid water, like ice, liquid water, like rain, and gas, like steam.
Steam has the greatest entropy per mole compared to ice and water, as steam has a higher degree of disorder and randomness in its molecular arrangement.
ice, sea water, steam, fresh water
Ice to water to steam.
SolidliquidgascyrstallinecolloidalglassplasmaThat's all! :)
Melting wax Melting ice freazing water Evaporating the water Cooling the steam
Water-steam Ice-water Rock-lava
Steam condences into water, water freezes in to ice, ice melts into water, water boils to steam
Sound travels faster in ice water compared to steam. This is because sound waves travel faster in denser mediums, and ice water is denser than steam. So, the speed of sound in ice water is faster than in steam.
In the liquid state, water is water. In a solid state, water is ice. In a gas state water is called water vapor.
Irreversible examples: Burning a piece of paper, baking a cake, digesting food, rusting of iron, breaking a glass. Reversible examples: Melting ice into water, boiling water into steam, freezing water into ice, dissolving sugar in water, compressing a gas into a liquid.
Sound travels faster in water than in ice or steam. This is because sound waves travel faster through denser materials, and water is denser than both ice and steam.
Yes. Water is liquid ice, and ice is solid steam.
The density of ice is approximately 0.92 g/cm³, the density of water is 1 g/cm³, and the density of steam (water vapor) at standard conditions is around 0.6 g/cm³. As temperature changes the density of water and ice can also change - with water being most dense at 4°C.