when the air around it is very cold and dry. lord death was here
Snow and ice can sublime !
If ice meaning frozen water, most likely not.
ICE Ice is not an element, but iodine is. It will sublime - meaning it will go from a solid state to a gaseous state. Another common example is a compound, dry ice, which is solid carbon dioxide. Under the proper conditions, most elements will sublime. Consult the phase diagram for a given element to find out the conditions required.
Yes
weak intermolecular forces because dry ice with sublime
Sublime Ice Cream was created in 2003.
Yews. Solid CO2 (dry ice) will sublime on heating
Snow and ice can sublime !
A mammoth is the most likely animal to be frozen in ice, because it lived during the ice age.
If ice meaning frozen water, most likely not.
ICE Ice is not an element, but iodine is. It will sublime - meaning it will go from a solid state to a gaseous state. Another common example is a compound, dry ice, which is solid carbon dioxide. Under the proper conditions, most elements will sublime. Consult the phase diagram for a given element to find out the conditions required.
unless the wood is hot/warm, it most likely not melt the ice.
Yes
weak intermolecular forces because dry ice with sublime
No. Sugar is a solid. When heated, it will burn, but not sublime. (To sublime is to go from the solid state to the gaseous state with no liquid state in between. The most common thing that will sublime is solid carbon dioxide, which we know as "dry ice". It's a solid below about -109F, and sublimes into the gaseous state above that. Carbon dioxide has no liquid state at atmospheric pressure; it is only liquid below 0 degrees F at pressures above 60PSI.)
Solid carbon dioxide, or dry ice, and Naphthalene both readily sublime at standard atmospheric pressure.
Unless the dry ice is under pressure, it will "sublime" and change from a solid to a gas. Therefore, there will be no "puddle".