1.0 liters
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.
25 ml. The volume would not change. Now pressure on the other hand...
At 0 degrees Celsius, the volume of the water will remain the same when it freezes, but it will transform into a solid state. So, the volume of the water after it freezes at 0 degrees Celsius will still be 325ml. The density of ice is lower than that of liquid water, which is why ice floats on water.
No. When water freezes and becomes ice, it expands. This causes it to have greater volume. If you were to melt down ice, the volume you would measure afterwards (in liquid form) would be lass than the volume of the actual solid ice.
A litre is a unit of volume and a kilogram is a unit of mass (weight). You can not directly equate different units of measurement.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The Units are not compatible, It depends upon the substance. The weight of a liter of a substance varies with the substance and, to a small extent, its temperature. A liter of Mercury weighs much more than a liter of water.A typical answer is: 1 liter of water "weighs" 1 kilogram, but don't forget it's water at 3.98 degrees Celsius or 39.164 degrees Fahrenheit.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------There are two problems with this common answer, which is why I am not just changing the answer.1. The kilogram is not a unit of weight, it is a unit of mass. So it is incorrect to say that a liter of water weighs one kilogram. In fact one liter of pure water has a mass of one kilogram.2. Technically this conversion is not exact since the density of water changes depending on it's state. Since a liter is a unit of volume, then, since water expands when frozen, a liter of solid ice has less mass than a liter of liquid water. Water is maximally dense at near 4 degrees Celsius.These are two different variables Kilograms is unit of mass, and liter is a unit of volume. To relate both you would need to know the density of the material. (Density = mass in kg/ volume in Liters)However, for water at 4°C, one kilogram is the weight of 1 liter.
1kg = 1000g ice will have volume: Density = mass /volume Volume = mass / density Volume = 1000/0.92 Volume = 1,086.95ml = 1,087ml 1,087 ml = 1.087 liters.
Ice cream is measured by litres in bulk, or grams by serving
Density of ice is 917 kg/m3 Volume is mass/density is (1kg)/(917 kg/m3)=1.09x10-3m3 and 1 litre=1m3 then 1 kilogram of ice is 1.09x10-3 litres.
1kg = 1000g ice will have volume: Density = mass /volume Volume = mass / density Volume = 1000/0.92 Volume = 1,086.95ml = 1,087ml 1,087 ml = 1.087 liters.
It depends upon what it is, and how much it is at some other temperature. For water that has frozen and is 0 degrees C, the volume, whatever it is, is 91.7 percent of the volume at 20 degrees C (liquid water). Since ice is only about 92% the density of water, ice floats.
Nope. Depending on the fluid, the weight of an object changes. Depending on the temperature of the ice cream, it could weigh more or less. A liter measures volume and a kilogram measures weight, and are not to be confused with one another. For example, 1L of water at 4 degrees centigrade will weigh 1kg, but once it is at 3 or 5, it will weigh more or less. So, there is no set answer for how much the 1L of ice cream will weigh, but as far as I am concerned, 1L of ice cream doesn't weigh 1kg
Mass is conserved. Volume changes slightly, so density changes as well, but mass remains the same.
It increases because water expands when frozen, this occurs becasue of hydrogen bonding.THANKS FOR USING WIKI.ANSWERS.COM
2 is the answer
slightly less than 1 kg per liter.At 0 degrees Celsius water when freezing expands to 9.05 % greater volume than it's original volume at 0 degrees Celsius.The density of ice is .917 kg/l. (that is clear ice with no gas[air] inclusion).
12.68 cups 1 liter = 4.22 cups 1 cup = 0.23 L 1 L = 4 metric cups
The answer depends on the scale: it could be millilitres, or litres, or cubic metres, or cubic kilometres.