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It would be difficult because it would be difficult to measure how fast it melts. You would have your X and Y axes, with time on the X axis, which means you would make a measurement every minute, for example. Then on the Y axis you would have your dependent variable, which you would have to figure out. I suspect that taking its temperature every minute wouldn't help a lot, because you're measuring the phase change from solid to liquid, where most of the energy is being used to change the phase rather than the temperature. If you could figure out how to quantify, scientifically (meaning not a visual estimate), the amount of frozen ice cream remaining every minute, then that would be your variable and you would have yourself a nice graph. But for a basic science experiment, I would look to something else easier to measure and possibly less delicious.

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14y ago
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Q: Is there a way to graph how fast ice cream melts?
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