The body of water located at 20 degrees north and 90 degrees west is the Gulf of Mexico.
Water is a solid at -20 degrees Celsius
That point is smack in the middle, about as far from land as you can get, in the Mediterranean Sea. Obvioiusly there's no other body of water that's any 'nearer' to that point.
20 S 80 W is in the South Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Peru, South America.
Water melts at 0 degrees Celsius, not 20 degrees. Water has a hexagonal close-packed structure when it is in solid form.
The body of water located at 20 degrees north and 90 degrees west is the Gulf of Mexico.
South Pacific Ocean
The Arabian Sea
Water is a solid at -20 degrees Celsius
That point is smack in the middle, about as far from land as you can get, in the Mediterranean Sea. Obvioiusly there's no other body of water that's any 'nearer' to that point.
I would say around 20 degrees celsius
20 S 80 W is in the South Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Peru, South America.
In a liquid, as at sea level water's boiling point is 100 degrees and it's freezing point is 0.
Water at -20 degrees Celsius; heat will expand matter, so at +40 degrees Celsius, water would have less density. * * * * * That would be true if there were no phase change. Unfortunately for the above answer, water freezes at 0 deg C and that phase change is accompanied by an expansion. As a result, water at 40 deg C is denser that water (ice) at -20 deg C.
Water melts at 0 degrees Celsius, not 20 degrees. Water has a hexagonal close-packed structure when it is in solid form.
At -20 degrees Celsius, water is in the solid phase and is frozen.
water