No
Ice begins to melt at Zero degrees...
at normal temperature above zero degree centigrade
The Fahrenheit equivalent to zero degrees Centigrade is 32. Centigrade is another name for Celsius, and zero Celsius is the same as zero centigrade.
Well, if you have a mixture that contains both ice and water it'll be pretty much spot zero deg Centigrade.
Assuming you're talking centigrade here... No, if the ambient temperature is lower then the ice will be colder too. It can't be more than zero degrees though, because then it will melt.
Absolute zero is -273.15 Centigrade or -459.67 Fahrenheit.Nothing know to man is lower than absolute zero, not even ice.Therefore we know ice can't burn at -5000 because it can not achieve this low temp.
Zero degrees Centigrade is the same a 32 degrees Fahrenheit, both mark the freezing point. Therefore 0 degrees Fahrenheit would be much colder than 0 degrees Centigrade.
Temperature is an important factor, but temperature alone cannot predict that ice will melt. Adding the heat of fusion to ice at zero degrees centigrade will cause it to melt without elevating its temperature, and removing the heat of fusion from water at zero degrees centigrade will cause it to freeze without lowering its temperature.
On the Celsius, or Centigrade temperature scale, freezing is 0 (zero) degrees. On the Celsius, or Centigrade temperature scale, freezing is 0 (zero) degrees.
That's not a zero. The small circle is the symbol for "degree."
Absolute zero.
32 F