Ice is lighter (less dense) than water. Which is why ice can float on the surface of water.
An ice bottle is heavier than a water bottle because ice has a higher density than water. The same volume of ice will weigh more than the same volume of liquid water because ice molecules are more tightly packed together. When water freezes into ice, it expands and becomes more compact, leading to greater weight in the same space.
It isn't. How did you get that idea? Ice is much lighter than lead, for the same volume.
Mercury is a liquid that is less viscous but heavier than water. Mercury is a dense liquid metal at room temperature, making it heavier than water, which is less viscous than water due to its lower viscosity.
Yes, that is correct. This is because the water molecules in liquid form are more densely packed compared to the same volume of ice, which has a more open structure due to the arrangement of molecules in a crystalline lattice.
Yes, Mercury is heavier than water. Mercury has a density of 13.6 g/cm³, which is much greater than the density of water at 1 g/cm³.
ice is not heavier than water
Ice is heavier than aluminium. You may think that ice is just water really it holds more (volume) than aluminium.
If you freeze a sample of liquid water it should expand but still weigh the same amount. Water is denser than ice so by volume liquid water is heavier than water ice, thus ice floats.
An ice bottle is heavier than a water bottle because ice has a higher density than water. The same volume of ice will weigh more than the same volume of liquid water because ice molecules are more tightly packed together. When water freezes into ice, it expands and becomes more compact, leading to greater weight in the same space.
It isn't. How did you get that idea? Ice is much lighter than lead, for the same volume.
it depends on what wood it is and what ice.
Ice is lighter than water. That is why it floats on water.The term "lighter" is confusing here. A pound of water will still freeze into a pound of ice. However, the the pound of ice is less dense than the pound of water, so it floats. This gives the impression that a pound of ice is lighter than a pound of water. Well really, it depends on the quantity of both ice and water. However lets say if you had 1 kilogram of ice and 1 kilogram of water. The ice would weigh more because the particles are pulled together more and they're no longer liquid (physically) and the ice would be bigger and heavier (obviously) .
yes sand is heavier than water:)
Yes molasses is heavier than water
Oh, dude, when ice melts, it gets lighter. Like, think about it, the ice is turning into water, so it's losing all that solid, icy weight. It's like saying bye-bye to those extra pounds and becoming a sleek, slim water molecule. So yeah, lighter all the way!
Salt water is heavier than fresh water. The salt dissolved in salt water increases its density, making it heavier than pure water.
no vinegar is heavier