Heat because Ice and water would thaw out and begin to heat up
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It depends upon the condition of the ice and the environment it is in. For example, a block of ice in room temperature does not give off energy - to the contrary, it absorbs energy as it melts. . But a block of ice at -5oC that is set in freezer that is -20oC will give off its thermal energy until the block of ice's temperature falls to the freezer's temperature.
The Answer: Alcohol The ice begins pulling heat (energy) from the alcohol. It is not the ice cooling the alcohol it is the alcohol that transfers heat to the ice (solid water). The ice draws heat from the warmer alcohol inducing the ice to melt. This is because the freezing point of the alcohol is much lower than the ice. If we were to keep the ice in the glass (by adding more) the rate of melting of the ice would slow because the heat (energy loss) of the alcohol has been reduced. But it would indeed continue to draw heat from the alcohol just more slowly. {this of course would require no atmosphere heat (energy) from contacting either the ice or the alcohol.} If we had solid CO2 (dry ice) it could draw enough energy (heat) from the alcohol to freeze it solid. {this of course would require no atmosphere heat (energy) from contacting either the ice or the alcohol. Plus a lot of dry ice to replace what has melted or sublimated away.} By: Mark L. Vizon
ya when ice convert to water then it flows.......
No energy is gained. On the contrary, energy is required to make ice melt.
Heat because Ice and water would thaw out and begin to heat up
About three hundred and ninety grams.
390g is 0.86 (0.859803) pounds.
390g is 13.8 (13.757) ounces.
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A calorie is the amount of energy needed to heat 1 gram of water by 1 degree Celsius. So you can't burn a calorie.
636 J
8.25
Potential energy
When an ice cube gains energy, it is the same as gaining heat. So if an ice cube is getting warmer, it melts.
Energy isn't "destroyed" and mass isn't "created" Basically mass is a "form" of energy. Much like ice is a "form" of water. So while one could, kinda, say "ice is destroyed when it melts into water" it isn't exactly true (even though it is no longer ice).