It doesn't matter. Displacement is dependant on weight, which is in turn dependant on mass. The water will still have the same mass regardless of whether it is frozen or not. Thus displacement will be the same. The fact that ice expands when it freezes is the reason why ice floats on water in the first place. It has nothing to do with how much water is displaced.
Displacement as in volume displacement. Ice will take up more volume than water since ice less dense. And since 90% of ice is below sea level, the water level will be lower once the ice melts. If you do not believe me, take a beaker and fill it to some water and add some ice cubes until the meniscus reaches some arbitrary value. Cover the beaker with a hermetic seal. Leave the beaker out in room temperature until the ice melts completely. Now observe where the level of the meniscus is at.
To simulate the opposite effect, global cooling, put an unopened can of soda in the freezer for, lets say, several hours. You will notice the can has expanded.
Try this simple experiment and see for yourself. Get a large glass and fill it almost to the brim with water. Then drop five or six ice cubes into the glass. Then fill the glass all the way to the brim, just until it's almost overflowing. Carefully put the glass into the microwave and heat it for about thirty to forty seconds. You'll notive that despite the ice melting the water level in the glass is exactly the same as when you put it in the microwave.
Your experiment has failed:1. A portion of the water evaporated into the environment of the microwave.
2. Thermal expansion occurred in the glass, same with any other container.
3. Filling it to the brim causes the surface tension to be convex rather than concave (a bad simulation of the actual sea level) Thus, the convex surface tension retains after the ice is melted simply because of the attraction between the molecules of water to the walls. This attraction remains strong even despite small changes in volume( thus no change in the water level).
4. If an etched line were to be used instead of filling it the the brim, you would see a decreased level of water.
You've also forgotten about another major component of sea level rise: thermal expansion. Water expands as it heats up.
Thermal expansion also occurs in ice. Thus slightly warmer ice will expand taking up more volume than the warmer water. Also warmer temperatures will evaporate more of the earth's oceans, where a significant amount will precipitate back on ice caps, glaciers and on land.
No, I'm saying I never mentioned glaciers.
So those quack proponents of global warming do not believe melting glaciers have no effect on water level?
See above. Volume doesn't affect the displacement of the water. Just how much ice is exposed at the surface.
It does since only 10% of ice is exposed to the surface for ice located in water. However, 90% of those ice masses are located under. Thus, volume displacement.
Former Vice President Al Gore. 'nough said. The rise in temperatures is just a unique and temporary phenomena that has been observed over the last two centuries. It is not significant enough to affect polar ice caps on a global scale. I remember one time scientists believed that the earth was experiencing global cooling.
Yet it
is affecting the polar ice caps. This is simple observational fact. The polar ice caps have shown a definite warming trend.
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Your key word here is
trend. Those quacks like extrapolating the temperature trend, despite any their lack of evidence that it will happen. Extrapolation does not count as fact. The current trend does not affect the polar ice caps significantly. If the trend would continue over time or if the trend rate increases then yes, it would.
And you probably rememeber one or two scientists mention cooling because there was a cooling trend from the late 1940's through the early 70's. It was caused primarily by a sharp rise in the use of areosols -which have a net cooling effect- and other particulate pollutants, as well as an increase in volcanic activity and several other minor factors. However, a few members of the media blew the whole thing way out of proprtion, with Newsweek and National Geographic reporting that scienitsts had predicted an imminent ice age, which, of course, they hadn't.
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