1. a popsicle stick, to shove up yourself 2. hot water.. and cold water. 3. the Transformers movie if u get bored. 4. a sleeping mexican 5. a black TyIyTyTyIyE
It is not a case of 'faster', but a difference in temperature. Pure water at STP freezes at 0o C (zero degrees centigrade). This is the scientific standard. However, If any substance is dissolved in water , this depress the freezing point. So if there is fluoride in it the freezing point of 'fluoride water' will be lower than pure water. Please see the Table of Cryoscopic Constants. Sea water being saline, having sodium chloride dissolved in it , freezes when the water temperature reaches '-4oC' ( 27o F)
H2O is water. Water is ice when it freezes. Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit / 0 degrees Celsius
On the Fahrenheit scale, water freezes, or melts, at 32 degrees. Likewise, water freezes at 0.0 Celsius.
No. Water, for example, expands when it freezes.
In theory water will freeze if left at 32 F. However, that's not necessarily so. Distilled water must get much colder before it freezes, because at higher temperatures water need particulate contaminates in it to seed the crystallization process. Water contaminated with substances such as salt require lower temperatures to freeze.
Hot water freezes faster
# I think that regular water freezes faster. == ==
Cold water freezes faster then warm water.
water freezes faster than tea because unlike tea, it has no additives or chemical compounds in it. Therefor, there are no "barriers" in the freezing process of water and therefor, it freezes faster than tea.
Sugar water freezes faster than salt water. However, regular tap water will freeze faster than either salt, or sugar water.
probably water
water
I think it is fresh water freezes faster because the salt melts ice.
Fresh water freezes much much quicker.
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water
Coke