At 0 degrees Celsius, water (ice) is at its freezing point so it wouldn't really melt unless it goes above. At 0 degrees Faranheit, water is well below it's freezing point and wouldn't melt.
Depends on the amount of water.
1"
2
2
Antarctica is a continent -- 10% of the earth's surface -- and will not melt. It's ice sheet, however, is subject to melting, and, it covers 98% of the continent. There is no way to determine how long it would take for all the ice to melt off the continent.
Water freezes into ice at 0 degrees Celsius. Anything above that it will melt. Therefore ice must be 0 or below
Ice melts when it is heating above the freezing point, which for water is zero degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit; if the air is warmer than that temperature, it will warm up the ice causing it to melt.
At 70 degrees it would take 24 hours to melt 2000 lbs of ice
about and hour
680s
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.
it depends upon the amount and the shape of the ice.
approximately 40 seconds if it is at room temperature that is 25 degrees c at 298k
Pepper, on its own, will not melt ice.
it takes 2 minutes for it to melt
2
2
that depends on the size of the ice cube, how much salt, and the ambient temperature.
it would probably take about five minutes for the ice cube to actually melt