The melting point of water is zero degrees Celsius.
0ºC (zero degrees Celsius)
Assuming you are talking about water, the freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius, melting point would be anything above that, and just in case you want to know, the boiling point for water is 100 degrees celsius
At 1 atmosphere pressure, ice melts to liquid water at 0° Celsius.
No, boiling point is not the same as melting point. Boiling point is the point at which a liquid begins to become a gas. (Water begins to become water vapor at about 212 degrees fahrenheit, or 100 celsius) Melting point is the point at which a sold begins to become a solid. (Ice begins to become water at about 32 degrees fahrenheit, or 0 degrees celsius)
Each substance has a different melting point. That depends on what compound you're talking about: Of table salt, NaCl, it is 801 °C though of water (ice), H2O, it is 0 °C and of carbon dioxide it is even lower: -78 °C
there is no melting point of water it is already a liquid its 0 degrees Celsius
The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius and the melting point of water is 0 degrees Celsius
The freezing point of water (also known as the melting point) is 0 degrees Celsius
0 degrees Celsius
100 Celsius
0ºC (zero degrees Celsius)
Assuming you are talking about water, the freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius, melting point would be anything above that, and just in case you want to know, the boiling point for water is 100 degrees celsius
The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius and the melting point of water is 0 degrees Celsius
Below 0 degrees Celsius
0 degrees Celsius is both the freezing point of water and the melting point of ice.
Andreas Celsius discovered water's melting point (0 degrees Celsius) in 1742.
At 1 atmosphere pressure, ice melts to liquid water at 0° Celsius.