in 5th grade a boy put it in apple juice and it started bubbling, i thought it was awesome!
i really dont know
The answer for hypothesis is where you do your experiment and then you look back at your problem then that's when you get your hypothesis . LOL :) have a great day
Because if the ice is wet then you've got ice and water there and 1 these have different thermal properties 2 you won't necessarily know the amount of water that's there so if you assume the weight of "ice" is all ice your results will be wrong.
Dry ice is not an element. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, CO2, which is a compound.
No need to cool dry ice.
nothing
No, you can not use ice instead of regular ice in the cloud chamber experiment. It would not react the same way. Dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide, the cloud chamber experiment relies on the sublimation of solid CO2 into gas.
the purpose is how is is getting bigger
i really dont know
The answer for hypothesis is where you do your experiment and then you look back at your problem then that's when you get your hypothesis . LOL :) have a great day
No, because dry ice is a solid and you cannot place a solid inside a solid. If it was liquid carbon dioxide (as opposed to dry ice, solid carbon dioxide) then it would behave similarly.
ice is slippery and dry ice is not because ice dosent dry out when the sun hits it and dry ice does!
the volume of gas i think so because someone had the same answer
a molecular solid...
My experiment of my science project is called what makes ice melts fastest I come this experiment because I want to know how does sun and ice help the ice help the ice sidewalk during winter time for this experiment you'll need ice salt and control...
Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide (CO2). It is called dry ice because it does not melt when it heats up, it goes directly from solid to gas. It is NOT the same as ordinary ice, which is of course, solid water. Dry ice is much colder than ordinary ice.
Yes, dry ice is opaque.