2 is the answer
Strictly speaking, the volume of water will increase. For example, if you have a 200 gram chunk of ice floating in 1000 ml of water, the volume of the water itself is 1000 ml. When the ice melts, the volume of water will be 1200 ml. However, if you're asking whether the water level in the container will go up or down, the answer is "neither." The ice displaces an amount of water equal to the mass of the ice. When the ice melts, the mass does not chance, so the amount of the original water displaced by the melted ice does not change. Hence, the water level will remain the same.
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.
Ice VolumeThe density of ice is 0.9167 g/mL; the given mass is 1.000gVolume = mass/density= 1.000 g/0.9167 g/mL= 0.9167 mLWater VolumeThe density of water is 0.9998 g/mL; the given mass is 1.000gVolume = mass/density= 1.000 g/0.9998 g/mL= 0.9998 mLThe volume of ice is 0.9167ml and the volume of water is 0.9998 mL
No, the volume of ice cannot be smaller than the water.
Yes, when ice cubes are placed in water, they will lower the temperature of the water, causing it to freeze if the temperature drops below 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius). The ice cubes transfer their cold temperature to the water, leading to the formation of ice.
The factor for the difference between 0° C liquid and 0° C frozen is about 1.09. So 325 x 1.09 is the volume of the frozen water. That's why capped bottles that freeze explode. H2O density at 0, 0.9999 liquid, 0.9150 frozen.
Ice starts melting after 0 degrees Celsius.
The volume of ice created from 200cc of water is also 200cc. When water freezes, it expands slightly, but the volume change is minimal. Therefore, the volume of ice formed will be very close to the volume of water initially used.
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.
Yes, ice has a definite volume because it is a solid state of water molecules that are fixed in position. The volume of ice will remain constant as long as there are no changes in temperature or pressure.
It is not. It varies slightly. The volume of ice will be larger than with water when water and ice are the same weight.