yes
"Nitrogen" in fertilizer is in the form of bioavailable nitrogen ... nitrates and/or ammonia salts ... so yes, it would lower the melting point of water and "melt ice" the same way that rock salt does.
Melting point:- oxygen: -218,79 0C- carbon dioxide: -56,6 oC- nitrogen: -210 oCBoiling point:- oxygen: -182,262 0C- nitrogen: -195,795 oC
well, water can't technically melt. the solid form for water melts depending on how big the soild is. it would probably take about 75 degrees to melt ice.
ice can changed to water by heating it . the ice will slowly melt into the form of water
Water can melt if it transitions from a solid state, such as ice, to a liquid state due to an increase in temperature. The term "melt" refers to the change in physical state from solid to liquid, regardless of the initial form.
Ice melt at 0 0C to form liquid water; any link between boiling water and ice melting.
Cyanide does not melt iron, as cyanide is a chemical that is typically used in liquid or gas form to interfere with the body's ability to use oxygen. It is not a substance that has the ability to melt iron.
Since oxygen is found as a gas here on Earth, it would have to be extremely cold for it to change into a liquid form. So in all but a very rare case, no.
Glacial melt water from the last ice age.
The Moon does not have enough gravity to form a thick atmosphere. Intense sunlight reaches and heats the surface. Liquid water would be ionized and escape back into space as hydrogen and oxygen ions. The water on the Moon is in the form of ice in deep crater shadows. Sunlight cannot reach this ice to melt and vaporize it.
You can't melt paper. Heating paper will simply result in it burning. Heating it in the absense of oxygen will cause it to chemically break down into carbon and water.
Liquid nitrogen is not dry ice. Dry ice is a solid form of carbon dioxide and liquid nitrogen is pure nitrogen in liquid form. Dry ice is frozen nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen is also frozen nitrogen, but is also pressurized. That's why it's in large, steel boxes. Chur.