Assuming you're talking centigrade here...
No, if the ambient temperature is lower then the ice will be colder too. It can't be more than zero degrees though, because then it will melt.
If you mean 0°Celsius, that equates to +32°F, and yes, ice could melt, albeit slowly.
The table is in a room that has a temperature higher than 0 degrees Lower than 0 it stays as ice; higher than 0 it melts
Ice melts because it requires a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius to remain ice. A glass of orange juice is warmer than 0 degrees Celsius
This is because the ice at 0 deg C is colder to the extent that the latent heat of freezing has been removed from the water at 0 deg C.
Water. Depending on whether you cooling ( freezing point) or whether you are warming (from ice to melting point).
the temp of ice cream is 0 the temp of ice cream is 0
The ISBN of Of Walking In Ice is 978-0-9796121-0-7.
0+0 is always 0 0-0 is always 0 0*0 is always 0 0/0 is undetermined, and can basically be any value. 0^0 is a bit fuzzy. It's often used as 1 because it makes equations work.
Water freezes into ice at 0 degrees Celsius. Anything above that it will melt. Therefore ice must be 0 or below
At the polar ice caps, you can always find some ice. Probably more than "some" though.
Melting of ice is at 0 oC.
Ice water will quickly get warmer. Ice, a mixture of ice and water actually, will remain at 0 degrees until all the ice has melted. Ice has a certain amount of latent heat; it requires heat energy to convert ice at 0 degrees, to water at 0 degrees.
Ice starts melting after 0 degrees Celsius.
Water at 0 oC is ice.
The Vanilla Ice Project - 2010 Ice My House 2-0 was released on: USA: 21 January 2012
The Vanilla Ice Project - 2010 Ice My House 3-0 was released on: USA: 20 January 2013
Ice (from pure water that is) will melt when the temperature rises from 0 degrees Celsius or higher. The only temperature ice will stay ice is 0 degrees Celsius or lower.