QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- what state of matter was the snow when it fell from the sky?
- during the day, what role did the sun play in changing the snow on the ground?
- what happened to the snow when temperatures dropped overnight?
- why did the snow turn into solid ice instead of staying soft and fluffy?
- even though snow and ice look different, what substance are they both made of?
Brief Explanations
- Snow consists of frozen water crystals, which is a solid state of matter.
- The sun provides thermal energy that melts solid snow into liquid water.
- When temperatures drop below freezing overnight, any melted snow (liquid water) freezes back into a solid form.
- When snow melts from sun/warmth, it becomes liquid water; when this water freezes again overnight, it forms a dense, solid ice structure instead of the loose, crystalline snow.
- Both snow and ice are frozen forms of water, so their core substance is the same.
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- Solid
- The sun melted the snow into liquid water by providing heat.
- The melted snow (liquid water) froze back into solid ice.
- The snow first melted into liquid water from daytime warmth, then this water froze into dense, solid ice when temperatures dropped overnight, rather than reforming the loose snow crystals.
- They are both made of water (H₂O).