Mecury has a very small amount of water at the poles.Venus has NO water at all.Earth has tons of the stuff.Mars has loads of frozen water at the poles.
While water is moving, its temperatue can drop below zero and it doesn't freeze. Obviously, faster moving rivers are less likely to freeze. For lakes, water's unique density behaviour protects them from freezing. Unlike almost all substances, the solid form of water (ice) is less dense than the liquid form. Ice cubes float. (For almost all other substances, the "cubes" would sink.) So when lakes freeze, the ice stays at the top. This insulates the remaining water from the colder air above. If ice cubes sank, then lakes could freeze all the way to the bottom: the ice that formed would fall to the bottom, continually exposing the top water to the cold air.
At the poles, water is typically in the form of ice or snow throughout the year due to the extremely cold temperatures. This ice contributes to the formation of polar ice caps that cover the land masses in Antarctica and the Arctic region.
Soda contains dissolved solids (like sugars and flavors) that lower the freezing point of water. This means that the freezing point of soda is lower than that of plain water, making it less likely to freeze at typical freezer temperatures.
Moving water distributes heat energy among more molecules, and the loss of heat from the water's surface must be to a cooling medium below 32°F /0° C. Underground rock is usually not that cold. Ground water may also be heated by geothermal sources.
By definition, ice is frozen water. If it doesn't freeze it isn't ice.There is no liquid water at the south pole. The north pole is generally frozen as well, but bear in mind, the freezing point for sea water is much lower than that of pure water. Salt is a type of anti-freeze. So during the summer, you can have open water even at the north pole.
there is to much preasure down there. ice has to have a way to expand when it frezes. if there is too much water on top of it, it cant expand because of all of the weight.
No, not all liquids and gases freeze in the same way as water. The freezing point of a substance depends on its chemical composition and molecular structure. Different substances will freeze at different temperatures.
All you have to do is freeze water to make it hard.
From its Wikipedia page: "Being the densest water mass of the World Ocean, AABW is found to occupy the depth range below 4000 m of all ocean basins that have a connection to the Southern Ocean at that level." The Southern Ocean freezes at about a depth of eight to 12 feet during the winter months, which is not deep enough to freeze the bottom water.
Absolutly! All water cooled automotive engines have freeze plugs. Chris
No, not all liquids freeze at 0°C. The freezing point of a liquid depends on its specific chemical properties. Water freezes at 0°C, but other liquids, such as alcohol or oil, can have different freezing points.
Yes, just about anything can freeze. All matter is able to freeze.
Drain all the water lines. If you cannot drain the water lines then use a compressor to blow the water out. Pour RV anti-freeze in all the toilet bowls, and toilet tanks. Pour the anti-freeze in all sink and bathtub drains.
Yes it is possible to freeze the reusable water bottles overnight. One tip is not to fill it all the way. When water starts to freeze it expands, and if you fill the water bottle completely full, it could explode.
50% anti freeze and 50% water is the usual mix
that is acshualy a trick question because all you do is have water and freeze it by putting it in the freezer.