Today I woke up thinking about density. I remember someone at a coffee shop last week insisting that ice sinks in water "because it's frozen." It's one of those misconceptions that sounds reasonable at first—frozen things are solid, solid things are heavy, heavy things sink. But that's not how density works.
Density is mass divided by volume. When water freezes, its molecules arrange into a crystalline lattice that takes up more space than liquid water. Same mass, larger volume, lower density. That's why ice floats. It's not about being "solid" or "liquid"—it's about how tightly the molecules pack together.
I tried explaining this with a simple analogy: imagine packing ten marbles into a small box versus spreading them out in a larger box. The marbles themselves haven't changed, but the density of marbles per box has. The person nodded but still looked skeptical. Sometimes the intuitive answer feels more real than the physics.