Ice bergs are always melting to some extent, it is just extremely slow. There's a lot of ice to melt.
Yes
Salt water cubes melt fast because the salt make it give up its BTUs faster
Salt. Salt dissolves in water, and causes the freezing point to fall; this causes the ice to melt. Sugar does not have this effect, and chalk doesn't dissolve in water.
The freezing point of water decrease because the dissolution is a process which release heat.
Dissolving is not the same thing as melting. When you dissolve salt in water, for example, neither the salt nor the water melts. In the example of salt in water, salt is the solute and water is the solvent. The salt (which is the solute) is what dissolves (but does not melt).
Salt water will melt an ice cube faster.
Salt doesnt melt, it is absorbed, and as for melting on cold mornings.... name something that does melt on a cold morning.----Salt will cause water ice to soften and melt unless the temperature is very cold (much colder than you're ever likely to see this side of the arctic circle). the salt itself doesn't melt; it converts the ice around it to water and dissolves in that water, allowing it to spread out and melt more ice.
Salt water
water doesn't melt when salt is added to ICE it lowers the temperature at which water freezes.
salt
salt. salt melts ice.
Salt water freezes at a lower temperature, which is why salt is used to melt road ice. In an environment where the temperature is slowly getting warmer as to melt the ice, frozen salt water will melt quicker than ice.
No, it dissolves.
melt salt would dissolve
Most probably , it would be fresh water. This is because since there is no salt which would keep the cold , the fresh water would melt faster.
The ice will melt, as long as the temperature around it is over negative six degrees Fahrenheit. The salt combines with the snow, which is H2O, and creates salt water. Because the freezing point of salt water is negative six degrees, the salt shall melt if not in -6 degree weather.
Yes