Probably; 42°C = 107.6°F
yes it can if it ice but if its plain water then no
I am going to assume your talking about Fahrenheit. Which would take 32 degrees Fahrenheit for ice to begin to melt (albeit slowly). If you come from a place that uses Celsius its understandable to be confused by this at it will seem illogical as Celsius is a simpler and a more logical way to measure temperature.
5500 degrees Celsius = 9,932 degrees Fahrenheit.
That is 864 degrees Fahrenheit and 735 degrees kelvin
No, aluminum does not melt in a typical campfire because the temperature of a campfire (around 600-800 degrees Celsius) is below the melting point of aluminum (660 degrees Celsius). However, extreme temperatures from a hotter fire source could melt aluminum.
No. There will just be sweet gooey stuff from the gummy bears.
they have a special coating on them.
Silver melts at 961.8 degrees Celsius.
If they melt and stick to the windows they can ruin windows
O degrees Celsius or less ;)
50 degrees Celsius
Aluminum melts at approximately 660 degrees Celsius (1220 degrees Fahrenheit).
Ice will melt at a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Well, Mike and Ikes don't melt well at all, but I can't answer for Jolly ranchers, dots, or gummy bears.
No, table sugar (sucrose) does not melt at 186 degrees Celsius. Sucrose melts at around 186 degrees Celsius and breaks down into glucose and fructose at higher temperatures.
0 degrees celsius
Yes.