It depends how much water and how much ice you hae. if you have 1 ice cube and 6 cups of water, the water will weigh more. But, if you have 10 ice cubes and 1/4 cup of water the ice will weigh more.
They weigh the same per mole, but ice is less dense.
if you are talking about the same glass that had water in it and THEN froze, then my friend the weight is the same. Ofcourse this is correct only if while freezing, no water spilled out of the glass (because ice takes up more space than water.
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.
Ice water is more dense than warm water.
Your crazy imperial measurements confuse me. Water weighs 1 kilogram per litre. The answer to your question is that ice is less dense than water. This is due to the crystalline structure of ice, which takes up more space per molecule of water than in its liquid form.
There are too many variables to give a standard weight, but it will weigh the same as the weight of the water you started with (if we ignore vapor loss).
== == Ice is frozen water, so the ice would weigh the same as the water that was applied to the surface during the " flooding process ". Water weighs about 8 pounds per gallon. One thousand gallons of water would weigh about 8,000 pounds.
They weigh the same
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
if you are talking about the same glass that had water in it and THEN froze, then my friend the weight is the same. Ofcourse this is correct only if while freezing, no water spilled out of the glass (because ice takes up more space than water.
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.
It depends how small it is crushed and how tightly it's packed. The smaller it's crushed and more tightly it's packed, the heavier it is as there is more ice and less space between the pieces of ice. In the most finely crushed and firmly packed volumes of the frozen stuff, the cubic foot of crushed ice will approach being a solid block. A cubic foot of water weighs about 62.4 pounds. A solid block of ice of the same volume weighs about 57.5 pounds. A cubic foot of "normal" crushed ice might weigh 35 to 45 pound range. And it could weigh more or less.
Ice water is more dense than warm water.
yes liquid water is more dense than ice water
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) .
Water is more dense than ice because it's molecules are closer together.
Ice is water. So the solubility of ice is moot.
Ice water is more dence then normal water because the particles in ice water move slower then normal water. This is because ice water has been in a much colder area then normal drinking water.