frozen in ice form
Ice
Yes, water can exist in liquid form at 0 degrees Celsius under normal atmospheric pressure. However, it will freeze into a solid state (ice) if the temperature drops below 0 degrees Celsius.
That would depend on the quantities of each form. If you had roughly equal masses of steam and ice, you would end up with water; probably lukewarm water. While the transition from state to state was occurring, you would have ice (solid water), and steam (gaseous water) and where the two met, there would be liquid water.
At the poles and underground. It is ice.
Water, Ice, and Steam
frozen in ice form
ice valcanos do exist
Solid
Ice
Antarctica's ice sheet rests on 98% of the continent. It has been said that the ice is so heavy, ". . . In East Antarctica, the ice sheet rests on a major land mass, but in West Antarctica the bed can extend to more than 2,500 m below sea level." Quoted from the Antarctic Ice Sheet entry in Wikipedia. This is some, not most of the ice sheet. Ice shelves exist mostly below sea level.
A saltwater ocean is believed to exist nearly 200 km below Ganymede's surface, sandwiched between layers of ice.
Fish do survive in Arctic region because at -4*C ice melts and exist in liquid state
Anything that exist in a solid state. This is because energy is required to break up the bonds that exist as a force of cohesion among the particles of the matter. For example,ice.
What ice are we talking about here
NO only ice
yes it does