because it is so just accept it
hope this helped xx
No, it's the melting point.
the melting point of ice is not dependent on its mass, it has a fixed melting point, hundred degree Celsius. The melting point of water (ice) should be zero degrees Celsius or any thing higher, Yes ice would melt a one hundred degrees Celsius but it would also boil at that temperature.
Zero degrees Celsius is the melting point of ice. If the temperature rises to zero degrees Celsius or higher, the ice will become water.
0 degrees C is the melting point of H20. That would mean it is also the melting point of ice.
Antifreeze decreases the freezing point of ice so that it melts at lower temperatures also.
Of ice, zero degrees.
No, it's the melting point.
any temperature above zero.
the melting point of ice is not dependent on its mass, it has a fixed melting point, hundred degree Celsius. The melting point of water (ice) should be zero degrees Celsius or any thing higher, Yes ice would melt a one hundred degrees Celsius but it would also boil at that temperature.
It is the opposite. The boiling point is greater than the melting point. for example for fresh water, the boiling point is 100 centigrade while the melting point (for ice) is zero.
what is the melting point of ice on top of the Himalayan
Salt lowers the melting point of ice.
The triple point of water is zero degree Celsius this is because 1)zero degree Celsius is the melting point of ice. 2)water changes from liquid to solid in zero degree Celsius.
Zero degrees Celsius is the melting point of ice. If the temperature rises to zero degrees Celsius or higher, the ice will become water.
when we lower the melting point of of ice for example from 00C TO -20C, as the temperature is 00C that is above the new melting point of ice so ice get melt
If the ice is free of impurities and the pressure is standard atmospheric pressure, then it melts at zero° C / 32° F / 273.15 K.
A man's name given to a scale of temperatures running from zero at the lowest melting point of ice to 100 for human body heat (but now said to tun from 32 for melting point of pure ice to 212 for the boiling point of water [at sea level].