Ice turn in water only if the temperature is over 0 0C.
No, boiling water is the best example of evaporation along with any form of steam production. Answer In relation to the ice cube which will first produce water. It will be the water that evaporates. When an ice cube is placed in a warm room it becomes coated with a layer of water, it is no longer a true ice cube.
from a solid into a liquid.
An ice cube is solid, and contains little gas although there could be air bubbles inside the ice.
Liquid is much more tangible than ice if that's what your asking....
An ice cube is not liquid; the ice starts out as a liquid, but when frozen metamorphosis's into a solid. The ice will not become liquid again unless melted.
No, boiling water is the best example of evaporation along with any form of steam production. Answer In relation to the ice cube which will first produce water. It will be the water that evaporates. When an ice cube is placed in a warm room it becomes coated with a layer of water, it is no longer a true ice cube.
First of all, if the water is frozen, then you can't put an ice cube into it. Secondly, if you put an ice cube in liquid then froze it then it would become part of the liquid that froze.
Thermal energy from the surrounding room causes the ice cube to absorb heat, causing its temperature to increase. Once the ice cube reaches its melting point, the thermal energy break the bonds between the water molecules in the ice, turning it into liquid water.
Freezing point of water
from a solid into a liquid.
Because it changes from a solid shape (ice cube) to a liquid shape (Water)
An ice cube is solid, and contains little gas although there could be air bubbles inside the ice.
Liquid is much more tangible than ice if that's what your asking....
An example of a solid to a liquid is ice melting into water.
When ice cube is submerged on water...The upthrust created on the ice cube by water is equal to the weight of the displaced water...when the ice cube is melting its volume changes but its weight remains the same and its exactly equal to the weight of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen...therefore the 'volume of of melted water' fits exactly to the 'volume of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen'... So the water level does not change! -Shenal K Mendis ;)
Yes, when an ice cube melts, it turns into liquid water. This is because the ice cube is made of solid water molecules, and when it absorbs enough heat energy to overcome its solid state, it transitions into liquid form whilst maintaining its molecular composition as H2O.
heat