No, salt water is not able to turn to ice.
salt ice water
salt. salt melts ice.
well for something to freeze it has to be 0 degrees or lower which is what ice is, frozen water. so the water has to be 1 degree or more to NOT freeze so the ice is colder than salt watercoz salt water is not frozen... does t6hat make sense? Actually, salt water CAN be colder than ice because the salt lowers the freezing point of the water.
The salt water gets warmer faster then the ice water, because salt water is in the sun and the salt water is heated by the sun.
When ice forms in a salty body of water such as the ocean, the salt remains in the liquid portion of water underneath the ice, and the ice is pure water.
Salt helps to melt ice by lowering the freezing point of water. When salt is spread on ice, it disrupts the ice's ability to bond together, causing it to melt at a lower temperature than it would otherwise. This creates a salty water mixture that is able to flow more easily and break apart the ice.
Salt melts ice faster than sugar or pepper. Salt lowers the freezing point of water, causing it to turn into liquid water at a lower temperature than normal. Pepper and sugar do not have the same effect on ice as salt does.
salt water ice and fresh water ice
the salt dissolves and the water will become salt water
Salt water and ice because that's how they do it
The ice cube made of salt and water will melt faster than the one made of sugar and water, which in turn will melt faster than the one made from just water. Salt and sugar lower the freezing point of water, which causes the ice to melt faster.
The dissolvation of salt in water is exothermic.