Eating ice cream each day is one way to help you gain weight. You also want to eat a lot of other high calories foods.
no it doesn't it is just the same as regular water and it will help hydrate and then you well pee the rest out
You cannot gain weight by eating ice. Ice is water and water is used to hydrate the body. This may actually help you lose weight.
No as it will turn to water and therefore come out the other end
Yes, in my opinion it does because water is proven to reduce hunger, lower cholesterol, and tones muscles. Since ice is frozen water, it does all of these things as well. It also gives you something to munch on so you dont think about food as much. :)Yes ;)
yes
Water's weight, when frozen into ice stays the same, but the density of water is much higher than ice's, since Ice has the same weight and contents of Water, but takes up significantly more space.
A diet of carbs and fats will gain weight quickly. Bread, ice-cream, vegetables like potatoes and carrots will all help someone gain weight quickly. Also fruits are high in sugars and can be consumed to gain weight.
Yes. And if you eat ice cream while watching TV, that helps even more.
No. When water freezes it expands (actually becoming less dense) but its mass remains constant. Matter can be neither created nor destroyed.
Water doesn't gain or lose mass when it freezes. Ice is less dense than water, this is why it floats. It may seem heavier, but there is no way that water can gain mass from just losing energy. Water does evaporate though even at very low temperatures, so if there is an apparent weight loss it is because of evaporation.
The weight of the water will stay the same whether ice, water or steam, because the mass has not changed.
It's to help spread their weight while they're walking on the ice - and to propel them through the water.
When ice cube is submerged on water...The upthrust created on the ice cube by water is equal to the weight of the displaced water...when the ice cube is melting its volume changes but its weight remains the same and its exactly equal to the weight of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen...therefore the 'volume of of melted water' fits exactly to the 'volume of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen'... So the water level does not change! -Shenal K Mendis ;)