ChatterBank0 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes, but this doesn't answer the question.
1 kg of water will still be 1kg of water whatever the temperature. The mass is a function of the amount of matter, not the temperature.
Similarly, the weight of the water is a function of the acceleration due to gravity (in layman's terms, gravity) which is the same anywhere on the Earth (give or take) and certainly doesn't alter with temperature.
As usual, this is a question that has been badly set. "Heaviness" seems to have been used as a substitute for "density." Tocompound the problem, my pub quiz's "answer" was that warm water is heavier!
Koamu
In which case, both our quizmasters were wrong. Unless the question was considering only water between 0 and about 4 degrees Celsius, in which case the warmer water would be "heavier."
Why is heavier used as a synonym for denser in this case? When we talk about one person being heavier than another, we don't mean density, so why here? It's just sloppy thinking and poor science.
Rant over.