If water expands as it freezes and ice forms from the outside in then why doesn't it continually break as it's freezing?
Checkmate atheists.
>>8153780
why would it breaks at freezing temperature ?
>>8153782
Because the outside layer is already frozen while the inside layers are freezing
>>8153789
The whole already expanded gradually before reaching below 0C°, it's not like the outside froze instantly, leaving the core intact. So the final expansion is minimal.
>>8153796
>celsius
Faggot
>>8153815
>>8153824
pajeet, is that you ?
>>8153824
>Implying that Eurocucks aren't being overrun by sandniggers
>>8153851
>the amount of refugees is less than 1 % of the european population
>"overrun by sandniggers"
>>8153780
It normally does this very thing. It is the reason why ice cubes are white towards the middle. The white you see is tiny air bubbles that are formed in the water around sediment. The increasing pressure pushes them together to the center. The air bubbles shrink as the pressure increases and reduces the pressure forces on the ice cube, preventing most ice cubes from cracking while freezing.
Some ice cubes will still crack as they swell up. You can actually make perfectly clear ice by squeezing it using an ice ball mold. This will squeeze the air bubbles out.
>>8154714