The answer is B
Here is a small experiment you can do to test this.
<span>
Put a pot of water on the stove and bring it to a boil. Take a dry lid and cover it for a minute, and lift the lid up. What happens?
What should happen is that the water droplets run down the lid and fall back into the pot.</span>
Answer:
no
Explanation:
no any percentage matches with the provided ones
Water expands as it freezes, so ice generally has more oxygen in it than liquid water, making it denser.
Because technically there is no such thing as cold
all that exists is heat
this is because heat is the rapid movement of particles, made by friction (to understand why you must delve into physics and some chemistry)
so, when you feel cold, it's really the absence of heat
so instead of "keeping the cold out", which makes no sense at all scientifically, insulation keeps the heat in.
as a side note
the feeling of cold is produced when you come in contact with an object (yes, air counts) that has less heat, or energy, than you do, You feel cold because heat (energy) from your body is being transferred to the environment. This ABSENCE OF HEAT in your body is why you feel cold