Yes.
Putting ice in a soda to make it cold is a physical change. The ice melts into water, but it does not change the chemical composition of the soda itself.
ice melts become it gives cold to the soda
To make a soda can sweat, place it in a cold environment or add ice to the surface of the can. The difference in temperature between the cold can and the warm air causes condensation to form on the outside of the can, creating the "sweating" effect.
An ice cream float and a soda geyser
No. Unless adding ice cubes to soda means you drink less soda.
When ice is added to a glass of room-temperature soda, the cold ice causes the surrounding soda molecules to lose energy and cool down. As the ice melts, it absorbs heat from the soda, decreasing the soda's temperature. Meanwhile, the soda's carbon dioxide gas may be released more quickly due to the cooling effect, which can make the drink fizz more. Overall, the interaction leads to a transfer of heat and a change in the state of the ice.
ice cream dew soda
When soda is mixed with ice cream, the carbon dioxide gas in the soda gets released and forms bubbles, creating foam. This happens because the cold temperature of the ice cream helps the gas escape more easily.
add ice-cream cold cold cold ice cream
maybe
Yes, it will keep the soda cold because the salt help the ice not to melt. Don't believe me check it yourself. Get an ice cube put a little salt on it and it doest melt. Or get an ice cube put some salt on it and then get a string put on top and IT WILL STICK!!!!!!!
a root beer float