It will range from approx 149.996 grams at 4 deg C to 143.76 grams at 100 deg C.
150
At room temperature (20C) 149.7 grams. At higher temperatures it will be less.
Yes, liquid water does have mass. If you have one litre of water - then you have one kilogram of water (weight/mass). The same applies for if you have twenty litres of water... you then have twenty kilograms of water.
Yes, frozen water (ice) and liquid water have the same mass when measured under the same conditions. The mass of water does not change when it freezes; however, its volume does change due to the difference in density between ice and liquid water. Ice is less dense than liquid water, which is why it floats.
As the more energetic form of water -- water vapor -- is formed, the liquid water chills. Thus conservation of energy is preserved. Mass of course remains the same.
The total mass of a sample of water remains constant when it condenses from a liquid to gas, according to the law of conservation of mass. Although the state of the water changes, the mass does not change during the phase transition. Therefore, the total mass of the water in both the liquid and gaseous states is the same.
defination of liquid x
Definitely. Example from a chemistry problem: Find mass of the water in this equation.....___Well of course! Mass being the amount of mater in an object, there will always be matter in some liquid.
rock is a mass water is a liquid
Water
Yes, water vapor does have mass. Water vapor is a gas composed of water molecules, and like all matter, it has mass. However, the mass of water vapor is much lighter compared to liquid water.
The total mass of a sample of water remains constant when it condenses from a liquid to a gas, according to the law of conservation of mass. Although the water changes state, transitioning from liquid to gas involves energy changes rather than mass loss. Therefore, the mass before and after the phase change is the same.