Any amount of water can make an ice cube.
It's not the amount that determines if water will become ice, it is the temperature.
The water just needs to be at a temperature of 0oC or lower, and it will become ice.
It depends on how big the ice cubes are. In general, one cup of solid ice will melt to become .917 cups of water.
It takes 1 pound of water to make 1 pound of ice cubes. It's just that the ice cubes will have a greater volume than the water that made them.
There's enough water to create a single ice cube.
It depends on how big the ice cube is.
depends on the size of the ice cube
syrup,contact lens solution,vanilla flavoring,food colour and water.
ice is a solid so u can't say ml, u may say grams, but anw, hypothetically speaking, it is still 50ml.
680.4
By assuming density of water 1 g/ml the total weight of 4 times 160 ml is 22.5757 oz.
Ice expands as it warms. At 4 degrees C water achieves it's maximum density. Warm ice is less dense than cold ice. Any amount of liquid water would mean that the ice has gotten as warm as it can get and that it is in equilibrium with the liquid water. The ice, being crystalline, has a discreet melting point so it is either water or it is warm ice. If the ice is wet, it is less dense than ice that is cold enough that the water in contact with it freezes. That doesn't mean that warm ice must be wet ice. If the water is removed, the dry ice will be the same density as the wet ice of the same temperature. Having said that, it is possible that you want to contrast the density of frozen carbon dioxide to water ice. * Water ice has a density of 0.92 g/ml * Dry ice (CO2) has a density range from 1.4 to 1.6 g/ml
It depends if the ice cube your talking about have the bigger density than the water which is 1.00G/ML then it will sink .... TO get the density of the cube u have u have to divide the mass over the volume of the cube..
You will have roughly the same amount of ice as the amount of water you started out with, so probably about 5 mL of ice.
42 mL
Milliliter (ml) is the same as cubic centimeter (cm3 ------------------------------- 64 ml of water will fit in a 64 cm3 cube There are 1000 millilitres in a litre and 1000 cm3 in a litre, so 1ml = 1cm3
36 ml
No, because ice has a density of .92g/ml allowing it to float over on water's 1g/ml density.
Temp is the same, the quantity of heat is not.
Exactly one. The 'mL' and the 'cc' are identical volumes.
Exactly one. The 'ml' and the 'cc' are identical volumes.
The volume is still 100 ml: the shape does not affect the volume.
One chicken Oxo cube can be dissolved in 500 ml water to make chicken broth. If you want to make one cup of chicken broth, you would use half an Oxo cube and 250 ml water.
125 mL = 125 cubic centimetres = (5 cm)3 So the dimensions are a cube of sides 5 cm.