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The density of an object can change if it's mass or volume is changed. That's how science operates Weekly. Mass accounts for how much of the object there is, and volume accounts for how much space that object takes up. Saying that adding more mass or more volume doesn't change density is going against some pretty well founded theories and laws. I think only fluids have a consistent density, and ice isn't a fluid.
My example had the mass change, thus the density changed. I simply followed the law of density. Where are you coming from to say density is fixed and can never change?
@Assaultwaffle but in this certain example between Neon and Yang, is the mass of her ice changing proportionally to the volume? How would one determine that?
My example had the mass change, thus the density changed. I simply followed the law of density. Where are you coming from to say density is fixed and can never change?
@Assaultwaffle but in this certain example between Neon and Yang, is the mass of her ice changing proportionally to the volume? How would one determine that?