4 degrees, water is one of the few molecules that expands at lower temperatures.
Ice melts at 0 degrees Celsius. That is a speciality of water. At 3.98 degrees Celsius, the density of water is highest before it begins to form ice crystals. Water at this temperature may be a slush of water and ice.
Zero degree (if we talk about destilled or reasonably pure water), for sea ice it's typically more around -4 degrees.
Yes. Frozen ice is less dense than liquid water. That is why ice cubes float in your drink! In fact at positive 4 °C, water is the most dense. Colder than that, and the density decreases, and also warmer than that, the density decreases.
Water freezes and becomes ice at zero degrees Celsius. Also, water has the odd quality that it begins to expand below about 4 degrees Celsius. So the answer is that it would turn into ice and its volume would increase a little.
It gets colder and denser - it is at its densest at about 4 degrees centigrade. If the water gets even colder then it will freeze and ice will form. As this happens the molecules actually move further apart (water ice is unusual in that the solid form of water is less dense than the liquid form - which is why ice floats).
No, water turns into ice at 0 degrees Celsius. At 4 degrees Celsius, water is still in its liquid form.
Ice melts at 0 degrees Celsius. That is a speciality of water. At 3.98 degrees Celsius, the density of water is highest before it begins to form ice crystals. Water at this temperature may be a slush of water and ice.
Zero degree (if we talk about destilled or reasonably pure water), for sea ice it's typically more around -4 degrees.
Water will freeze at 0 degrees celcius. A typical refrigerator will be set to about 4 degrees.
Yes. Frozen ice is less dense than liquid water. That is why ice cubes float in your drink! In fact at positive 4 °C, water is the most dense. Colder than that, and the density decreases, and also warmer than that, the density decreases.
ice crystals start to form at 4 degrees Celsius
-4 degrees Fahrenheit is colder than 0 degrees Fahrenheit.
To convert 4 kg of ice at 0 degrees Celsius to steam at 100 degrees Celsius, you would need to calculate the heat required to raise the temperature of ice to 0 degrees Celsius, melt the ice to water at 0 degrees Celsius, raise the temperature of water to 100 degrees Celsius, and then convert water to steam at 100 degrees Celsius. The total amount of heat needed can be calculated using the specific heat capacities and latent heats of fusion and vaporization of water.
It is still ice at -4 oC.
Ice cream needs to be kept below freezing, because it has ICE in it, and ice needs to be kept at 0 degrees centigrade or lower. On average a fridge is 4 degrees centigrade so it will melt in the fridge...
It is: 0 degrees centigrade that is warmest
Ice. It expands when it's 0 degrees Celsius.