. it melts
Ice will typically melt faster in a plastic or styrofoam cup compared to a paper cup. This is because plastic and styrofoam are better insulators, meaning they transfer heat more efficiently than paper. Therefore, the heat from the surroundings will more readily reach the ice in a plastic or styrofoam cup, causing it to melt faster.
byputting ice in a plastic cup and then wrapping it in a wool cloth or newspaper then experimenting the ice.................
no, it dosen't
Well obviously you have to insulate it so try to wrap as much plastic rap and wax paper around the outside of the cup as possible and try to support the ice cube using the plastic wrap attached to the sides of the cup. Also, don't let much light through.
because of the gravity of earth
The ice cubes will melt at a relatively equal rate in both the plastic and paper cup. The paper cup may allow for slightly more heat transfer due to its thinner material, but the difference in melting time should be minimal. Both cups will have water from the melted ice cubes after 20 minutes.
It would make a black spot on the top of the cup and then after a while it would set fire and explode.
Plastic is less dense than glass, so normally a plastic cup is considerably lighter than a glass cup, although in theory a very small glass cup could weigh less than a very large plastic cup.
Yes, the water has turned into ice. It was a liquid but it is now a solid. You can change it back again by melting it.
Who was Tracy who drinks for a plastic cup
Ice will melt faster in a cup with a larger surface area because more of the ice is in direct contact with the surrounding air, which speeds up the melting process. A cup made of a material that conducts heat well, such as metal, can also cause ice to melt more quickly compared to a cup made of a material that is a poor conductor of heat, such as a foam cup.
Putting the cup in the freezer keeps ice from melting. Those cups will slow down the melting rate, but if you've got ice at room temperature it's gonna melt eventually. Having said that, ice will melt slowest in a styrofoam cup.