Truthfully both. Eventually it will melt< but in the meantime, it will float.
hope that helps!
When you put ice into cold water, the ice will start to melt as it absorbs heat from the water. This will cause the temperature of the water to decrease as the ice melts. Gradually, the ice will completely melt into the water, resulting in a uniform, colder liquid.
If you put ice cubes in a bowl or whatever of hot water, the ice cube is sure to melt when put so says science.
When you put ice cubes in water, they float because their density is less than that of liquid water. The ice cubes displace some of the water, but they don't sink; instead, they remain partially submerged due to buoyancy. As they melt, the ice cubes will eventually turn into water, contributing to the overall liquid in the container.
Ice floats in water whenever you PUT ice in water, That's so simple. Whenever you put ice in water it floats ALL THE TIME!
One way you can melt sugar ice is put warm water all over it
If you put a ice at a sunny side not moving it, it will naturally melt into water not moving it's place just a puddle of water.
melt the ice and then put the remaining water through a filter and freeze the water back into ice
To melt is when you turn something from a solid to a liquid. E.g: If you put an ice-cube into a microwave it will turn into water because and ice-cube is just water that has been frozen.
put it in a microwave oven
If you put pressure on ice it will melt.
Ice melts faster in water because ice is made out of water but it is just frozen water put in the freezer.
Fresh-water ice will melt faster in salt water than it will in fresh water or in the open air. Ice forms when water molecules are cooled down enough to arrange into solid crystals. Salt will, basically, get between the water molecules and make it harder for them to form crystals.