If the salt is still in the water it will freeze inside the water so its technically frozen
On the contrary, it takes longer for salt water to freeze - it freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water does.
The pure water will freeze first since it has a lower freezing point than salt water. The salt in the salt water reduces its freezing point, so it will take longer to freeze compared to the pure water.
Ocean water freezes just like freshwater, but at lower temperatures. Fresh water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit but seawater freezes at about 28.4 degrees Fahrenheit, because of the salt in it.
Salt water freezes at a lower temp than fresh, meaning colder. It may freeze faster when chilled enough be cause the salt would disrupt the plateo of the water so it may freeze faster.
no, because if you put saltwater and freshwater in the freezer saltwater will not freeze completely ,because it has salt in it and it will not freeze at the same rate as freshwater that is my answer to this question.
Water freezes before salt water because adding salt lowers the freezing point of water. This means that salt water needs to reach a lower temperature in order to freeze compared to pure water. As a result, pure water will freeze at a higher temperature than salt water.
Salt water takes longer to freeze than plain water because the salt lowers the freezing point of the water. The time it takes for either to freeze depends on the temperature of the environment and the concentration of salt in the water. Generally, plain water will freeze faster than salt water in the same conditions.
Sugar water freezes faster than salt water. However, regular tap water will freeze faster than either salt, or sugar water.
It doesn't. Tap water freezes faster than salt water.
Fresh water freezes faster than salt water, yes.
Any water that gets cold enough to freeze. You can freeze fresh water, brackish water, salt water, or polluted water.
yes it does it does not freeze as fast
Table salt melts/freezes at 802 degrees Celsius
On the contrary, it takes longer for salt water to freeze - it freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water does.
Salt water freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water, so it typically takes longer for salt water to freeze compared to fresh water. This is because the presence of salt lowers the freezing point of water.
Sugar water will freeze faster. Salt lowers the temperature at which water freezes. That is why they put salt on the roads and on sidewalks in snowy areas. Sugar in water should have little to no affect on the rate of freezing.
i did the research on for a science project and sugar water freezes fastest