Why does ice float on water?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Ice is less dense than water
Ice is filled with air bubbles — Wrong. While ice can trap some air bubbles, this isn't why it floats. Pure ice without bubbles still floats because its molecular structure makes it less dense than water.
Ice is less dense than water ✓ — Correct! Ice is less dense than liquid water, which is unusual. When water freezes, molecules arrange in a crystal structure with more space between them. This makes ice about 9% less dense than water. So ice floats! This property is important for aquatic life, as frozen lakes stay liquid underneath.
Water freezes from the bottom up — Wrong. Water actually freezes from the top down, not bottom up! Ice floats because its crystal structure is less dense than liquid water. This top-down freezing protects aquatic life beneath the ice layer.
More Physics in Daily Life questions
- In a warm office that already reads 26 C, which change can make people feel cooler without lowering the thermostat?
- Why might 26 C feel acceptable in a breezy naturally ventilated summer building but too warm in a sealed winter office?
- On a warm humid day, why can the same 27 C room feel much worse once you start sweating?
- Why can moving air make a 27 C room feel cooler without changing the thermometer?
- Which hidden factor can make a desk beside a cold window feel chilly even when the thermostat across the room still reads 22 C?
- In the same 22 C room, why might someone who just climbed stairs feel warm while someone sitting in a T-shirt feels chilly?
