Does Water Level Rise, Lower, or Stay the Same After Ice Melts?

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When ice melts in a glass of water, the water level remains the same. This is because the volume of water displaced by the floating ice equals the weight of the ice, and as the ice melts, it adds an equivalent volume of water. The discussion highlights that while ice expands when frozen, the melted ice does not change the overall water level due to the principles of buoyancy. Some participants noted that variations in temperature might cause slight changes in volume, but these are generally negligible. Overall, the consensus is that the water level stays constant when ice melts in water.
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Ok, so you've got a glass of water with some ice (the ice is floating).


After the ice melts, does the water's surface level
a) rise?
b) lower?
c) stay the same?


(and why?)
 
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Surface level will drop. H20 expands when frozen - so when it turns to liquid H20 the volume will drop - dropping the surface level.

Nautica
 
But wouldn't a substantial part of the ice cube's volume be above the surface level? Could this compensate for the decrease in volume as the ice melts?
 
No, the level stays the same. Since the ice is floating, the water level is lower than the level of the top of the ice. The difference is due to the expansion of the ice.

When ice expands, it expands by something like 10%. Where is this extra 10% of volume? Its above the water level. All of it. As the ice melts, (lets say from top to bottom) the melted ice adds to the volume of water, but the ice also floats higher, cancelling out the added water level.

edit: Posted before moose. You are correct, moose.
 
ok i think i agree with you, russ_watters.


here's how i just figured it out:


we know that: the weight of the water displaced by the ice is equal to the weight of the ice cube (because it is floating).


thus, when the ice melts, the weight (of what was the ice) is still the same, so the volume displaced is the same.


hmm, does that make sense?
 
Originally posted by brum
ok i think i agree with you, russ_watters.
here's how i just figured it out:
we know that: the weight of the water displaced by the ice is equal to the weight of the ice cube (because it is floating).
thus, when the ice melts, the weight (of what was the ice) is still the same, so the volume displaced is the same.
hmm, does that make sense?
Sounds good, and I suppose the the change in temperature is so minor that its affectations on volume are minimal enough that saying "It remains the same" is safe enough as 'a truth'.
 
Originally posted by Mr. Robin Parsons
Sounds good, and I suppose the the change in temperature is so minor that its affectations on volume are minimal enough that saying "It remains the same" is safe enough as 'a truth'.
There is no change in temperature while the ice is melting.
 
Originally posted by Achy47
I'm guessing that you mean that the ice cube's temperature remains constant while melting: not the liquid's. The liquid in the glass will surely cool as the ice cube melts. If the ice cube and the entire glass of liquid are exactly at the freezing point, no melting will occur until one of them receives heat from somwhere in the surroundings.

There will be a miniscule volume change due to some liquid state temperature changes which may happen "if" the initial liquid is signifcantly above freezing when the process starts. The liquid state expansion/contraction of the water masses represented by he cube and he liquid respectively will be different since the intial liquid had a "head start" heat transfer (and liquid state contraction) to the ice while the cube was melting. This is assuming that liquid water expands linearly with temperature, which is a common assumption. So basically, the liquid state contraction of what was initially liquid will outweigh the liquid state expansion of what was ice. So the final level is ever so slightly lower.


Throwing that petty stuff aside I think russ nailed it on the head.
I was operating on the assumption that the water was at 32F when the ice was put in. Your right that for heat to flow there must be a temperature gradient in the water, but it won't be measurable unless the surroundings are significantly warmer or the volume of water is much higher than the volume of ice.

I made a lot of simplifying assumptions in the absence of given information.
 
Originally posted by russ_watters
I was operating on the assumption that the water was at 32F when the ice was put in. Your right that for heat to flow there must be a temperature gradient in the water, but it won't be measurable unless the surroundings are significantly warmer or the volume of water is much higher than the volume of ice.

I made a lot of simplifying assumptions in the absence of given information.
Actually, thought about this (a little) last night, the fact of water reaching its maximiun density at 4° C tells us that even if there is an increasing temp. gradient, it is following/pushing a shrinking volume with temp increase above 0° C, till it hits its max density at 4° C, then it starts expanding, so in actuallity, as the temperature of the water increases above 0° C, its volume is actually decreasing, so it "remains the same" till all of the ice melts, then the volume gets smaller! (Neat eh?!)
 
  • #10
Which explains why my coca-cola can expands when I freeze it. :smile:
 
  • #11
Originally posted by dreamweaver7
Which explains why my coca-cola can expands when I freeze it. :smile:
Yeah, its a real pain to clean the coke out of your freezer. Trust me, I know.
 
  • #12
Assumptions can be made either way. This point could be argued either way. Put a piece of ice in a cup and one time you will see the level rise, the next you will not - depends on the piece of ice and exactly what you mean by "floating". But, if you explain your answer - you will not be wrong either way.

Nautica
 
  • #13
Originally posted by nautica
Assumptions can be made either way. This point could be argued either way. Put a piece of ice in a cup and one time you will see the level rise, the next you will not - depends on the piece of ice and exactly what you mean by "floating". But, if you explain your answer - you will not be wrong either way.

Nautica
Humm this is a science forum, testing can be done! results checked! accuracy! and accurate answers! are achievable! therefore A-S-S-U-M-P-T-I-O-N-S need NOT be made! at all!
 
  • #14
I agree, I put a piece of ice in water and when melted, the water level rose - but I was told that was wrong. The reason I was told I was wrong is b/c the assumption was made that the ice was floating at the appropriate level to keep it from rising when melted.

I only made that statement to make a point that the right answer would be based on experimentation and your results can say one thing or another.

Nautica
 
  • #15
Originally posted by Mr. Robin Parsons
Humm this is a science forum, testing can be done! results checked! accuracy! and accurate answers! are achievable! therefore A-S-S-U-M-P-T-I-O-N-S need NOT be made! at all!
Sorry, MRP, but no. Even in an experiment, the same assumptions we talked about before are made in the experimental setup.
 
  • #16
Originally posted by russ_watters
Sorry, MRP, but no. Even in an experiment, the same assumptions we talked about before are made in the experimental setup.
Agreed russ, my 'rant'(!) was about the conclusion, not the premise, 'assumptions' are often made in the premise, it is one of those "slippery slopes" in experimentation, but after the experiment, we can measure all, and know, for the now un-assumed conditions, (now known from the experiment) such and such an outcome...right?
 
  • #17
Is the ice amphoric?

The water level will remain the same, Mr. Arch's principle, when water freezes air gets caught in it and makes teeny tiny little bubbles in the ice. Filling up more space
 
  • #18
Clearly if the ice and the water are both pure, the water level stays the same.

However, if the water is salt water, while the ice cube is pure water, then the level will rise slightly. This is also true for popular carbonated beverages.

If the ice is resting on the bottom of the glass, then the water level will rise.

If the ice is trapped beneath the surface of the water then the water level will drop.

If a tiny elf is sitting on top of the ice throwing rocks that had been on the ice into the water, then the water level will drop.
 
  • #19
The water level would indeed stay the same because although the ice water has expanded when ice was formed, it still has the same mass as before. The ice before and after will still have the same mass unless evaporation occurs. I say c. the level will stay the same
 
  • #20
certainly no offence meant towards the starter of the thread, but most of what is ensuing for answers come from the lack of "scientific (sorta) approach" from/in the original statement, (clearly no ones fault) inasmuch as we were not given the needed information, the water's temperature, the ice's initial state, (Air bubbles?) the "Ambient Energy Pressure" (temperature) of the surrounding area as a hot room will change (slightly) readings compared to a cold room...that kinda stuff...but a nice discussion ensued so, who cares ?
 
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