Solid Carbon Dioxide is known as 'dry ice'.
carbon dioxide ice
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide (CO2).
If you mean water ice, it will have more or less the same amount of carbon dioxide than the water it is made of. In other words, usually not much.
Dry Ice is frozen carbon dioxide.
Mars. Edit : As far as I know the ice caps contain water ice as well as frozen carbon dioxide.
Mars' ice caps are predominantly made up of water ice, with some layers also containing a mix of frozen carbon dioxide, also known as dry ice. The white polar caps are primarily composed of water ice, while the seasonal polar caps are a combination of water ice and frozen carbon dioxide.
When ice is dropped into hot water, the ice will melt due to the higher temperature of the water. The heat from the water is transferred to the ice, causing it to melt and eventually reach thermal equilibrium with the water.
Mars does
No, the polar caps of Mars are not believed to be composed entirely of frozen carbon dioxide. The polar caps consist of a mixture of water ice and carbon dioxide ice (dry ice). The carbon dioxide ice is most abundant during the winter.
water is H20 carbon dioxide is CO2 dry ice is carbon dioxide so is CO2 also table salt is sodium chloride - NaCl
No. Dry ice is carbon dioxide in the solid state. Regular ice is solid water.
No not at all. Dry ice is in fact solid Carbon dioxide, and there's no water whatsoever in it.