asked 187k views
5 votes
What happens to water when it changes to ice?

Its density increases.
Its density decreases.
Its mass increases.
Its mass decreases.
Its volume increases.
Its volume decreases.

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

Density decreases, Volume increases

Step-by-step explanation:

As the temperature decreases, the water contracts. Water has maximum density at 4° C. Thereafter, on further decrease in temperature, the water expands on cooling. Actually the water molecules crystallizes into open hexagonal structure. Thus, volume increases and density decreases. This is the reason that ice floats on water. The mass remains the same.

answered
User Joal
by
8.0k points
0 votes

Answer:

Its density decreases, and its volume increases

Step-by-step explanation:

Density is defined as Mass/Volume. What happens when water transforms into ice is that its density decreases because the volume the molecules now occupy increases.

The denominator of the rational expression
(Mass)/(Volume) is now larger (while the numerator stays the same), so the quotient gives a smaller number.

answered
User Sherrin
by
8.7k points

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