You probably need:
You'll need different variables as well. A constant variable should be that you begin the 'melting process' at the same time for both foods.
Materials can vary, it really depends on what you have and what you can get.
"Frozen in Time: Exploring the Science of Freezing Bubbles"
which gases affect the ozzone layer, stuff to do with levers, and this is a fun one frozen paintballs and warmed paintballs which one will shoot faster those are the only ones that i remember from the top of my head.
well on a science project that did, I tested to see how the surface affects how fast the ball rolls. I tested between frozen grass, tile, and asphalt. Now results were a little bit thrown off because I had to test it on frozen grass, but I still ended up to get a pretty excact answer, and that was that is traveled fastest on the frozen grass. Now if you are going to do this science project then remember that if the grass isn't frozen, then your results will probably be different.
try to do an experiment on if a frozen seed will grow taller than a regular seed
Means when the puck is frozen to travel faster
yes ice cream does melt faster than frozen yogurt because it has ice and cream in it that makes it melt faster and frozen yogurt has yogurt in it which makes it thicker and since its frozen it makes it even more thicker so ice cream does melt faster than frozen yogurt.thats why ice cream is faster melt than yogurt.
It probably is that frozen candles will melt faster
As the frozen cupcakes will require extra time to defrost, the unfrozen cupcakes will bake faster.
It expands like a vagina when you shove a stuffed animal up it
"Frozen in Time: The Coolest Cup for Chilling Drinks"
right now, i am doing a science fair project on thattt [: funn but gross. i will put update from december-janurary
First of all Ice Cream melts faster than Frozen Yogurt. So get your facts organized.