when all the ice has melted
As soon as the ice begins to melt
when all the ice has melted
To measure the temperature calibrated in the thermometer. Mercury as a liquid reacts well to temperature changes. It expands as it gets warmer, so thermometers measure the rise of the mercury to measure temperature.
Rising until 0 °C, then melting, then rising again while continiously heating
No, all the energy (here: warmth) you add to the solid is used to make it more liquid, only when ALL solid is converted in liquid, temperature will rise again.
It would depend on a contingency of variables. Being, how hot is the substance that it is being removed from, the temperature of the room, how long it takes from the time removed from the liquid until it is read, and the type of thermometer reading device.
when all the ice has melted
Get a thermometer - the mercury will rise or fall accordingly to the temperature of the air.
Melting need an increase of the temperature.
Most materials expand with the temperature increases. In this case, the liquid in the thermometer expands faster than the glass that holds it.
Alcohol in a thermometer rises whenever the temperature of its surrounding increases. As the temperature increases, the heat causes the alcohol to expand ever so slightly, which shows up as an increase of height of the alcohol in the tube of the thermometer.
the heat and temperature that causes it to rise and fall.
A Galileo thermometer is a thermometer made of a sealed glass cylinder containing a clear liquid and a series of objects whose densities are such that they rise or fall as the temperature changes.
The ice gets warmer, but the water gets colder.
A change in the reading of a thermometer from -20 to -10 degrees represents a rise in temperature of 10 degrees. Another way to say this is that the temperature changed by +10 degrees.
When temperature goes up the liquid expands. The liquid then takes up more space and you see this as a rise in scale on the thermometer. The same applies vise versa
The mercury will expand and rise up the thermometer tube until it reaches the temperature of the air around it. When it stops expanding, it is the same temperature as the air, and therefore gives an accurate reading.
The Galileo thermometer is based on a thermoscope designed by Galileo Galilei. There are multiple bubbles filled with different colored liquids and tags that indicate temperature. They sink or rise when their density changes with the temperature of the water around them. The bubble that sinks the farthest is the most accurate temperature.