Why Ice Floats

Photograph of an iceberg floating on water

Ice floats because it's slightly less dense than liquid water. Its density is low because hydrogen bonds pull slow-moving water molecules into crystalline arrangements with open spaces. If the temperature rises, heat breaks down the crystals; water molecules fill the spaces, forming denser liquid water. Click on each box to see how water molecules are arranged in ice and liquid water.

More info:

  1. How does the density of ice affect life?