Want this question answered?
Pure Argon is made by fractional distillation of liquid air. To get really pure the resulting Argon can be frozen again and re-fractionated.
no mars is not frozen it just as some liquid water that frozen at time
It can be frozen in a photograph.
This is a technique used to study cell membranes. First, the cell is frozen in water or other substance. The resulting frozen sample is "fractured," or cut, with a knife. The phospholipid bilayer membrane often splits in the middle, revealing proteins embedded in the layer.
The name of the frozen planet is Mars.
Frozen rain and/or moisure that has condensed on the window.
it's the condensed version of the following terms: 1. free eats (free food) 2. freaking sweet 3. frozen treats (homemade treats that are frozen)
It only means that there is water on the moon, it could be in frozen or little quantity.
I believe it is the tundra. It does get little precipitation, and it is very cold, resulting in the frozen soil.
No, not from the frozen state. If a saline solution (dissolved salt in water) is gently heated, the water will evaporate, leaving salt crystals behind. If the water vapour is captured and condensed, the result is drinking water.
Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide. dylan purdey
George Glew has written: 'Cook-freeze catering' -- subject(s): Food service, Frozen foods, Quantity cookery
Water expands slightly when if freezes (due to hydrogen bonding) and the resulting ice is less dense than water.(Actually, the water still weighs the same- it just takes up more space when frozen)
Pure Argon is made by fractional distillation of liquid air. To get really pure the resulting Argon can be frozen again and re-fractionated.
Once opened, leftover contents must be removed from the can and placed in a covered, nonmetallic container and refrigerated or frozen.
Someone needs to answer this. The directions are entirely unclear.
No. It can be cooled to the freezing temperature or water or colder, but cannot be frozen. In order to freeze something it has to have water in it. Sugar is a crystalized solution from the pulp of a sugar cane and has already had all of its water removed in the crystalization process. Hooweestik.