Under standard conditions - no. There is too much salt.
No. Seawater is salty, and will freeze at cooler temperatures than freshwater.
It can freeze in mid-air if the temp. is below 32 degrees. Best is when it is below 0 degrees
32 degrees fahrenheit, 0 degrees celsius
At 0 Degrees Celsius.
32 degrees Fahrenheit 0 degrees Celsius
No. Seawater is salty, and will freeze at cooler temperatures than freshwater.
The seawater does freeze. The freezing point of seawater depends upon it's salinity,which is the amount of salt that it contains. Open ocean seawater has a salinity of about 35. Fresh water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and 35 water freezes at about -2 degrees C. The decrease is linear so that water with a salinity of 17 freezes at about -1 degree C. In the winter large tracts of polar seawater freeze to a considerable thickness.
Seawater does freeze, but it freezes at a lower temperature than pure water. When compounds, like salt, are dissolved in water, it freezes at a lower temperature. This is called freezing point depression. Seawater has a salinity of 3.5% and freezes at about 28 degrees F or -2 degrees C.
The freeze point of water? 0 degrees.
water will freeze when it is at its freezing point which is 0 degrees
32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius
0 degrees centigrade 32 degrees Fahrenheit
Because 4 degrees Celsius is higher than 0 degrees Celsius
You can't freeze water at 17 degrees Celsius. The freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, it is liquid at 1 degree C. It will begin to freeze at 0 degrees C.
32 Degrees Fahrenheit 0 Degrees Celsius
It can freeze in mid-air if the temp. is below 32 degrees. Best is when it is below 0 degrees