What inference can you make based on the information in paragraph 3
Yes, salt water ice cubes melt more slowly than fresh water ice cubes because the addition of salt lowers the freezing point of water, requiring more energy to melt. This makes the salt water ice cubes colder and more resistant to melting.
5 cubes of sugar and one teaspoon full is needed in the preparation of salt sauger solution (SSS)
Ice cubes melt when the temperature around them is higher than their melting point. Salt does not melt at room temperature because its melting point is much higher than the typical environment temperatures. Instead of melting, salt dissolves in water, breaking down into its constituent ions.
Neither since the melting point of sugar is 365 F and the melting point of salt is 1474 F
Sodium chloride salt crystals are typically cubic in shape, with a repeating pattern of sodium and chlorine ions arranged in a lattice structure. The cubic shape arises from the way the ions pack together to minimize energy and achieve a stable structure.
If a lot of salt has been added (which I assume is the intention of this question), then the carrot cubes will shrink because the solution will be hypertonic to the carrot cubes. However, adding just the right amount of salt or too little salt can result in the carrot cube staying the same or bloating, respectively.
You get salt and put it in a cube
Salt melts ice cubes.
Yes, salt water ice cubes melt more slowly than fresh water ice cubes because the addition of salt lowers the freezing point of water, requiring more energy to melt. This makes the salt water ice cubes colder and more resistant to melting.
no it doesn't have chemicals in the the cubes its just salt and water
salt
Table Salt.
salt
Salt cubes will also melt at temperatures of -38
salt melts ice because it wants it to die
tetris! well actually, thats four. and they're squares. what do your little cubes do?
"salt of the earth" means a valuable person. You'd never know it from modern society, but salt used to be a very valuable commodity.