The tub because the increased amount of water gives in an quicker ability to melt more ice.
It depends on how big the pot and tub are, and the temperature difference between "hot" and "warm".
No, not in water. Gold is very dense. However, if you found a liquid that is more dense than gold, at a temperature that would not melt the gold, then the gold would indeed float in it.
There would be more pressure at the bottom of a pitcher of water 35cm deep. +++ To explain, the pressure is a function purely of depth, not volume.
This is mainly dependent on the mass and area of the ice in contact with the water, and the flow of water around the ice. Also any impurities in the water or ice will be influential. Obviously it would take longer to melt an iceberg than an fridge ice cube, and longer to melt a flat piece of ice, than a cube of ice of the same mass, so the question is impossible to answer without more information. In practice it would be complex to calculate and the easiest way to find out is simply by experimenting assuming the ice is not too large!
Viscosity has to do with the thickness of a fluid. Honey is more viscous than water for example. Blood becomes more and more viscous as it dries.
No, it wouldn't. a sugar cube would melt a lot faster in a cup of Hot water. the hot water helps it desolve more evenly than cold water.
out of Coke water juice and water what would melt the ice faster.butter, it is less than a solid, ice is more of a solid and has more valence electrons, so is takes longer to melt.
Water expands when it warms. So sea levels rise.The Antarctic ice caps melt as a result of global warming. This puts more water into the oceans thus raising sea levels.
I am sorry if this is not the answer u are looking for because i am only in 5 th grade a hot jug of water would because warm water is what the ice melts into so a hot jug of water would melt it faster answers by : Sahil Garg. otsenrE
Assuming this is performed at a constant temp and pressure, it would melt faster in salt water because the Na+ and Cl- molecules can temper with the orientation of water molecules in ice more than the minerals that exist in tap water can.
An ionic compound dissociated in water is an electrolyte and is of course more conductive..
The melting temperature of tungsten is 3422° C. If you can somehow prepare a sample of water at that temperature, more power to you, your tungsten will melt in it.
It depends on how big the pot and tub are, and the temperature difference between "hot" and "warm".
Hot water
melt
Edible wafer paper is made from water, vegetable oil, and potato starch. When a starch is heated, individual starch granules absorb the liquid and swell. Edible wafter paper would not melt in hot water. It is more likely that it would absorb the water and become a mush, which might appear as if it melts.
They can change Earth's surface in many ways, but the easiest to explain and understand is the physical change of ice melting to water. If the ice caps in Antarctica or the Arctic melt due to the heat of the sun, the Oceans would have more liquid water and less ice, therefore changing the Earth's surface and making it wetter. And some scientists say it would cover the world in water, which i disagree with, although I do believe in saving polar bears and such. For example, fill a glass with a little water and a lot of ice, then watch it melt, was the line where the ice's top the same? That's what I thought