It's both! Generally, people talk about water going from ice to water to gas instead of the other way around.
Freezing point = melting point
(The scientific names: melting - fusion, freezing - crystallization)
The freezing point of Magnesium is 1202 degrees Fahrenheit. The boiling point of Magnesium is 1994 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature is commonly referred to as melting point when a substance is approaching it from its solid state and is referred to as freezing point when a substance is approaching it from its liquid state.
A temperature of 70 degrees Celsius is typically well above both the melting and freezing points of most common substances. For water, its melting point is 0 degrees Celsius and its freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius as well.
The freezing point and melting point of a substance are the same, so the melting point would also be 52 degrees celsius.
The melting point of iodine is 113.7 degrees Celsius, and the freezing point is the same as the melting point, which is 113.7 degrees Celsius.
The melting point of a substance is the same as its freezing point in a closed system. Therefore, if the freezing point of a pure substance is 21 degrees Celsius, its melting point would also be 21 degrees Celsius.
The melting point is 961.78 degrees celsius, so the freezing point is 961.78 degrees celsius.
Yes the melting temperature and the freezing temperature of materials are the same.
The freezing/melting point of iron is ~1535 Degrees Celsius.
wow....hows about you look that up on google instead of typing that over here?
The freezing or melting point of oxygen is -218.8 degrees Celsius or 54.36 Kelvin.
32 degrees Fahrenheit 'Freezing Point' is an improper statement (i think), and the term 'Melting point' is more commonly used. Everything has a different Freezing/Melting point, so I assume you mean the Freezing/Melting point of water? This is 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 273.15 Kelvin.
The melting point and freezing point of water is the same at 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit) under standard atmospheric pressure. This means that water will transition from solid to liquid (melting) or liquid to solid (freezing) at this temperature.