Freeze it, with cold temperatures.
Example: Put a cup of it in the freezer for the night, wham! Ice!
No ice can turn to water and water can turn to ice
No, salt water is not able to turn to ice.
Water don't turn instantly into ice; this depends on the temperature.
Since the water is at a higher temperature than the ice, it transfers heat to the ice. This in turn raises the ice's temperature above its melting point of 32oF which turns the ice to water.
The main reason for this is that at 4 degree Celsius water has more density than ice hence the ice at the top of a water reservoir floats and does not goes down. Thus the water at the bottom remains in liquid form and hence the aquatic animals can survive. If the ice had more density than water it would have settled down and the next layer would have turn into to ice. Thus the whole reservoir would turn into ice.
the ice can melt and turn to water, or sublimation can occur and the ice turn to water vapor.
Turning water into ice in seconds can be done in a few ways. You can flash freeze the water for example.
In order to turn water (a liquid) into ice (a solid) the temperature would have to be 32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius
If the water is cold enough it will turn into ice.
It depends on what kind of ice. If it is a piece of ice from your freezer, then the ice would have been water. If it is an icicle outside then there would be water, maybe some dirt, and other chemicals. Say the ocean froze. The ocean would now be ice that was once water. So the ice would have been dirt, water, sand, and lots of other things. So any liquid can turn into ice by freezing. Water freezes at 32 Fahrenheit, but other liquids take even colder than 32.
when water turns into ice the atoms stops shilvering, the water gets solid.
ice is water. its just that the molecules of water slow down the vibrations that are moving and they turn into a solid, and what you get is Ice