It should melt it fairly quickly
Your question is not at all clear. The word ice can be used to describe either frozen fresh water or frozen salt water or frozen anything . Ice means turned to a solid . Now about you question. If you meant 'What does salt water do to Iced fresh water, then the first answer is not quite correct . If you mix salt with ' fresh water' ice, then the ice gets very much colder. It does not melt. To make ice cream without a refrigerator you can buy some crushed ice and mix a handful of salt with it. When you do this it becomes much colder than frozen fresh water, and if you put a tub of ice cream recipe into this batch of super cold ice, it will be cold enough to freeze the mixture to make ice cream. I used to make ice cream this way when I was a child, because we did not own a refrigerator and did not live near an ice cream shop.
Two examples of solid substances are ice (solid water) and salt.
Yes, you can put dry ice in salt water. It will bubble furiously and cool down the salt water.
You can't melt water as melting is the transistion from solid to liquid and water is already liquid. And, if you are referring to ice, saltwater does not freeze terrestrially.
Melting ice occurs when solid ice transitions to liquid water due to an increase in temperature. Dissolving salt in water occurs when salt crystals break down into individual ions and disperses evenly throughout the water.
Salt decreases the freezing point of water, causing the ice to melt. This happens because the salt lowers the temperature at which the ice can exist in a solid state, leading to the ice absorbing heat from its surroundings and melting.
Ice is frozen water, while salt is a compound that typically exists as a crystalline solid at room temperature. When salt is added to water, it can lower the freezing point of the water, making it harder for the water to freeze into ice.
Water as a solid is ice.
ICE is the solid state of water.
Fresh-water ice will melt faster in salt water than it will in fresh water or in the open air. Ice forms when water molecules are cooled down enough to arrange into solid crystals. Salt will, basically, get between the water molecules and make it harder for them to form crystals.
Salt lowers the freezing point of water, causing ice to melt. When salt is added to ice, it disrupts the balance between the solid and liquid states of water, making it harder for ice to stay frozen. This allows the ice to melt at a lower temperature than it normally would.
Salt helps in melting ice by lowering the freezing point of water. When salt is spread on ice, it disrupts the ice's ability to bond together, causing it to melt at a lower temperature than it would otherwise. This is because the salt molecules mix with the water molecules, preventing them from forming solid ice crystals.
salt ice water