No...absolutely impossible. If you did, your face would melt off and your children would explode.
salt water freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water so the fresh water gets frozen and not the salt water
Fresh water (of the same temperature) has the lower density ('lighter').
At the same temperature fresh water evaporates faster.
Salt water has a higher salinity level compared to fresh water, which makes it denser and allows objects to float more easily. Fresh water has a lower freezing point than salt water, allowing it to freeze at a higher temperature.
- Salt water is heavier than fresh water. - Fresh water freezes at zero degrees Celsius (32F), but salt water freezes at lower temperatures, depending on the amount of salt in the water. - Salt water boils at a higher temperature than fresh water.
Salt water freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water, so it typically takes longer for salt water to freeze compared to fresh water. This is because the presence of salt lowers the freezing point of water.
The difference is that fresh water will freeze at 0.c and salt will freeze to a lower temperature due to the presence of impurities (salt).
Salt water is more salty. And denser. As a result of this it boils at a higher temperature.
Fresh water freezes faster than salt water because salt lowers the freezing point of water. When salt is dissolved in water, it disrupts the formation of ice crystals, requiring the salt water to become colder than fresh water in order to freeze. This phenomenon is known as the "freezing point depression."
Fresh water freezes at a higher temperature than salt water. This is because the presence of impurities in water lowers its freezing point.
The Fahrenheit temperature scale was created using ice water, sea salt, and a mercury thermometer by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in the early 18th century.
Currents and thermal gradients aside, salt water is slightly more dense than fresh water, so (at the same depth, for the same temperature) the pressure in salt water will be creater than for fresh water. The difference in pressure will be (pressure in fresh water) x (density of salt water/density of fresh).