Hot water will make the ice cube melt really fast. If you use warm water it'll melt, but it takes a while. If you use cold water it won't melt unless the room is warm or hot.
If the water is hot, (at boiling point) it will boil, if the water is cold, ( at freezing point) it will freeze.
It doesn't. It does slow the melting of rock, but only because of the specific heat of water. (i.e. you've got to heat the water too.)
Salt decreases the freezing point of water and increases the boiling point of water.
it is pie
No. Mixtures always have lowered melting points.
Adding salt to water rises its boiling point but lowers the melting point
The addition of water can lower partial melting temperatures in silicate rocks.
no of course it doesnt, gosh
hot water takes longer @$$
Water does have an effect on the melting point of a mineral
Yes, one example is the different temperatures associated with water and with ice.
Water reduces the melting point of rock.
Yes, because oil has a different specific heat than water
If the water is hot, (at boiling point) it will boil, if the water is cold, ( at freezing point) it will freeze.
By melting and determinating the answers between the boiling and freezing of condensated water or other form of liquid.
it is because they were consistent at melting and boiling point
Putting salt on ice lowers it's melting temperature. So you could have liquid (salty) water a few degrees below it's normal freezing point. That only works for about ten degrees Celsius ( eighteen Fahrenheit) after that, there's no affect.