This depends on the size and temperature of the ice cube and the ordinary water's temperature and volume.
4t
For an ordinary number cube, the answer is 1/6
frozen water An ice cube is a cube (or other shape) that is simply frozen water that has been in an area that is 32 degrees or colder for a certain amount of time.
The time it takes for an ice cube to melt in water depends on factors such as the temperature of the water, the size of the ice cube, and the number of ice cubes. On average, a small ice cube will melt in a few minutes in room temperature water.
The answer is that the system is in 'equilibrium'. More exactly thermal equilibrium. Ice and Water can both form at 0C and 1 ATM. When two things are touching, they are at equilibrium with each other. Since the ice cube has had enough time to melt, it has had enough time to reach equilibrium with the water and is at 0C.
The answer is 10 feet, about 3 feet deeper than most Olympic Pools.
A cube 46.4 meters or 152 feet on a side is required to hold 100 million liters of water.
It is not possible, under ordinary circumstances, to have a cube with a negative volume.
The water raises the temperature of the ice cube
you put the ice cube in a cup, and then time a set number of minutes, after the set number of minutes is done, pour it into a graduated cylinder and measure it that way. Keep doing this for a the smae amount of time each time until the ice cube melts all the way.
Time Cube was created in 1997.
The simple reason is that an equilibrium reaction is occurring. When the ice cube is immersed into water, there is a difference in temperature, and as a result of this an equilibrium naturally occurs, with the ice cube warming up and the surrounding water cooling down. The ice cube will melt faster in a large amount of water than in a lesser amount because there is more surrounding water, and there will be differences in temperature between the water immediately surrounding the ice cube and the water surrounding the water surrounding the ice cube, so the outer 'layer' of water is warmer than that of the 'inner layer' (surrounding the ice cube), and this in turn warms up the inner layer and the outer layer cools down, still trying to reach equilibrium. Due to this increase in temperature the 'inner layer' tries to reach equilibrium with the ice cube and 'outer layer' of water even quicker, to produce a consistent temperature throughout the water. In a lesser amount of water there is less water to cool down, so the ice cube won't melt as quick as less energy is required to cool the water, unlike in the larger volume of water