Its volume increases and its density decreases.
ICE smart one u just had the answer in the question!!! ------------- Change of phase from liquid to solid, freezing, icing
Physical!Ice is H20(s) and Water is H2O(l)
This is a physical change. It's still water, just in solid form.
The melting of ice is a physical change because the liquid water is still H2O just like the water ice. And the melted water has all the physical and chemical properties of water, just like the ice. No new products with different properties are produced.
No, as long as it is the same peice of ice. The volume and the density change but not the mass
because it freezes
When water freezes, it turns into what we call ice. ice is a solid. no offense, but um stupid question.
when water freezes, it becomes a solid, it's called 'Ice'.
A glass of ice water is an example of a physical change, where water changes from a liquid to a solid state as it freezes. This change is reversible, as the ice can melt back into water.
ICE smart one u just had the answer in the question!!! ------------- Change of phase from liquid to solid, freezing, icing
Physical!Ice is H20(s) and Water is H2O(l)
No, ice does not undergo a chemical change when it freezes. Freezing is a physical change that causes water molecules to slow down and come closer together, forming a solid structure with the same chemical composition as liquid water.
This is a physical change. It's still water, just in solid form.
It does what all water does when it freezes: expands. This will crack the rock.
No, because the chemical properties of the water do not change.
Any water that freezes is ice. Ice can be clear, murky, or opaque depending on what impurities are in the water before it freezes. The temperature at which water freezes may vary depending on what dissolved or suspended matter it contains,
I would say the erosions or rather, the nature aka rain, snow, ice (when ice freezes (from water) it expands)