yes
An ice-cap stays in the same place - it may grow or shrink, but it stays essentially in the same place all the time. An ice-floe is mobile.
Ice melts and forms at zero degrees Celsius or thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit. When an ice cube melts, the puddle forming beneath it may be the same temperature or a degree warmer than the ice cube.
The white doesn't go anywhere when ice melts. When ice melts, its turns into water. Ice is just frozen water.
water level will remain the same
Stays the same (assuming that all the ice was floating to begin with).
No, it's a physical change, ice is just frozen water.It's a physical change because when ice melts into water, the compound of the ice stays the same, it just changes state.
because you know how ice melts in heat well its the same with sugar if you put a ice cube in cold it stays the same....well same with sugar and water
not true
As the ice cube is solid , the particles are tightly packed together but as it melts it changes to a liquid so the particles change so that they are like particles in a liquid. the mass is conserved ( stays the same)
It starts with evaporation. The water gets evaporated and turns into clouds. Up highg in the sky it is ice pellets. When it rains the ice melts, when it snows, the collect dust particles and stuff...and when it ices, it stays the same.
Because if ice melts it turns into water
When an ice cube gains energy, it is the same as gaining heat. So if an ice cube is getting warmer, it melts.
yes
An ice-cap stays in the same place - it may grow or shrink, but it stays essentially in the same place all the time. An ice-floe is mobile.
The reason why salt melts ice cream is the same as why it reduces the freezing lvl of water. It simply reacts with the ice seeing as the ice then gets a lower freezing point, the ice cream melts.
It is the salt itself that melts ice.