Shimon
Platinum Member
I was thinking about this problem today and could use some help.
If you had a very solid sphere full of water and lowered the temperature so the water would (normally) freeze and the the sphere was as indestrucable as possible...would the water freeze since it has no room to expand? Or would the pressure just rise in the sphere and water stays in liquid form? I remember PV=T from school so I would guess that since volume is contant and temperature is decreased then pressure must go up. So, I would guess the water would not freeze. Am I right? (Sorry, but these kinds of things keep me up at night).
Thanks!
If you had a very solid sphere full of water and lowered the temperature so the water would (normally) freeze and the the sphere was as indestrucable as possible...would the water freeze since it has no room to expand? Or would the pressure just rise in the sphere and water stays in liquid form? I remember PV=T from school so I would guess that since volume is contant and temperature is decreased then pressure must go up. So, I would guess the water would not freeze. Am I right? (Sorry, but these kinds of things keep me up at night).
Thanks!