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To make hot ice, you would need materials such as sodium acetate (often available as a powder or crystals), distilled water, a heat source, a glass container for mixing, and a stirring rod. Optional materials include a thermometer, a hot plate or microwave for heating the solution, and an ice bath for cooling and solidifying the hot ice.
To make fog without dry ice and a fog machines, first fill a jar with hot water and then pour most of it out into a bowl. Place a strainer over the jar and then add ice to the strainer. The fog should begin to form inside the jar due to condensation.
The hot water would transfer heat to the ice, causing it to melt and eventually reach a point where the water temperature is equal throughout. This process involves the ice absorbing heat energy from the hot water until it reaches a thermal equilibrium.
An ice cube will melt faster in hot water compared to cold water or by itself. The higher temperature of the hot water transfers more heat energy to the ice cube, causing it to melt at a quicker rate.
Because the ice is freezing, and the water is hot so the ice would make it cold. Because the water is warm it would break or destroy the freezing ice. So when it crackles it is actually breaking.
For hot ice, the controlled variable would be the temperature at which the solution is prepared. Keeping this constant ensures that any differences observed in the formation of hot ice are due to the change in the independent variable (such as the amount of sodium acetate added) rather than fluctuations in temperature.
yes search "hot ice" on youtube
They're both parts of an experiment.You conduct an experiment to find something out. Let's say you want to know if little kids like strawberries in their ice cream, and you know that little kids like ice cream. The presence of strawberries would be your manipulated variable. To test it, you would get two groups of kids - a control group that got normal ice cream (no strawberries, variable = 0 = false) and a group with ice cream that had strawberries (variable = 1 = true). You need the control group to help make sure nothing weird happened. For example, let's say you just happened to get a group of kids that hated ice cream. If you didn't have a control group, you would assume that no, kids don't like strawberries in their ice cream because none of them ate the ice cream when in fact it is the ice cream itself that they don't like, which you wouldn't've known without the control group.
iced hot chocolate
Because ice cream is better on a hot day then hot dog because a hot dog will make you more hotter
I don't think that is possible. How can "hot" make "cool" water "cold"? (also, 'hot ice' is boiling water)
No, hot water should not be used to make an ice rink. Cold water freezes faster and results in a smoother ice surface. Hot water can also create weak spots in the ice, making it less safe for skating.
Yes, in fact it doesnt melt. The salt goes through the ice, then make little holes in the ice.
dry ice and hot water
Yes, using hot water instead of cold water can make clearer ice because it contains fewer impurities that can cause cloudiness in the ice.
if you think of solid water (ice) as just the solid form of liquid water then any solid is the "ice" of its liquid. with that said you could say a hot piece of pure iron (for example) is the hot ice of liquid iron.
The presence of salt lowers the freezing point of water, allowing ice to melt at a lower temperature. This is due to a process called freezing point depression, where salt disrupts the formation of ice crystals.