Environmental Sciences, asked by subashapu8429, 9 months ago

The solid form of water present in nature

Answers

Answered by newsongs2004
1

Answer:

Pure water is tasteless, odorless, and colorless. Water can occur in three states: solid (ice), liquid, or gas (vapor).

Solid water—ice is frozen water. When water freezes, its molecules move farther apart, making ice less dense than water. This means that ice will be lighter than the same volume of water, and so ice will float in water. Water freezes at 0° Celsius, 32° Fahrenheit.

Liquid water is wet and fluid. This is the form of water with which we are most familiar. We use liquid water in many ways, including washing and drinking.

Water as a gas—vapor is always present in the air around us. You cannot see it. When you boil water, the water changes from a liquid to a gas or water vapor. As some of the water vapor cools, we see it as a small cloud called steam. This cloud of steam is a miniversion of the clouds we see in the sky. At sea level, steam is formed at 100° Celsius, 212° Fahrenheit.

The water vapor attaches to small bits of dust in the air. It forms raindrops in warm temperatures. In cold temperatures, it freezes and forms snow or hail.

Explanation:

Answered by sashiraja0
1

Answer:

The solid form of water present in nature :-

it is true as we saw the eg of huge ice blocks present in the glaciers.

it does not only found in the earth , their is satelite of jupiter where it is mostly predicted that it is coverd with huge ice blocks of water.

                                                     for the question it is obtained by nature , then it is true because there is no any humman and any aother species effort to make that ice blocks.

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