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How do water’s relative densities as a solid and a liquid differ from that of most other substances?

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Answer:

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Step-by-step explanation:

oh and your answer . Water’s solid form is less dense than its liquid form, while the opposite is true of most other substances.

For example, the Ice.

Notice that the ice is a solid form of the water but when you put the ice in the water, it floats. That makes it denser than the water itself. This happens because the hydrogen bonds cause the molecules to push farther apart with each other which result to lower density of the solid form of water.

How do water’s relative densities as a solid and a liquid differ from that of most-example-1
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