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.
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The ice cube would first melt into liquid water due to the heat from the sun (melting). The liquid water would then evaporate into water vapor (evaporation). Finally, the water vapor would cool and condense back into liquid water (condensation).
Cotton balls will not keep an ice cube from melting. While they may insulate the ice cube slightly, they are not effective at preventing the ice from melting due to their low heat conductivity. Placing the ice cube in a well-insulated container or using a more effective insulating material would be more effective in preventing the ice from melting.
Melting is a physical change.
Temperature affects an ice cube by either melting it or freezing it. If the temperature is warmer than the ice cube's melting point, the ice will melt into water. If the temperature is colder than the ice cube's freezing point, the water will freeze and the ice cube will grow.
Melting, freezing, boiling, evaporation are physical change
a butter bar to a popcorn butterAn example of melting is an ice cube in the sun. Another example of melting is solid cooking grease like Crisco melting in a hot fry pan.
It is an example of change in the state of matter.
Put an ice cube in a microwave, turn it on, and watch carefully
You could keep it in a freezer.
Due to their varying melting points (ice 32 and sugar 366°)
Because melting sugar turns color to form caramel. i.e. it has changed and specifically it has undergone a CHEMICAL CHANGE (Or chemical reaction). When melting ice, no chemical reaction occurs, and so it is just a PHYSICAL CHANGE.
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The ice cube would first melt into liquid water due to the heat from the sun (melting). The liquid water would then evaporate into water vapor (evaporation). Finally, the water vapor would cool and condense back into liquid water (condensation).
When an ice cube is melting, it absorbs heat from its surroundings, causing the ice crystals to break down and transition into liquid water. The temperature of the ice cube will gradually increase until it reaches the melting point of 0 degrees Celsius, at which point it will fully melt into water.
An example of a change of state is an ice cube melting and becoming liquid water, or liquid water boiling to become steam.
An example of a reversible change is an ice cube meting into water and then changing back to an ice cube again if frozen. Another is chocolate melting when heated and changing back to a solid when cooled.