during melting its bond strength decreases. so,its molecular spacing will be less. Thatswhy volume of ice decreases during melting.
No, but it will take up slightly less space after melting.
Melted ice cream is a heterogeneous mixture.
To determine the mass of ice that can be melted by 2.0 kJ of energy, we use the latent heat of fusion for ice, which is approximately 334 J/g. First, convert 2.0 kJ to joules (2.0 kJ = 2000 J). Then, divide the total energy by the latent heat: ( \frac{2000 , \text{J}}{334 , \text{J/g}} \approx 5.99 , \text{g} ). Thus, about 6 grams of ice can be melted by 2.0 kJ of energy.
meltwater
water
An ice cap is an ice mass that covers less than 50 000 km² of land area (usually covering a highland area), so a melted ice cap is literally just one that has melted, and the high volume of water causes floods.
the mass does not change only the shape
No, but it will take up slightly less space after melting.
Yes, the mass of the melted ice cube remains the same as the original ice cube. When ice melts, it undergoes a phase change from a solid to a liquid, but the total amount of matter remains constant.
No, because melted ice is water - you drink water.
Melted ice is liquid water and water boil.
Melted ice cream is a heterogeneous mixture.
To determine the mass of ice that can be melted by 2.0 kJ of energy, we use the latent heat of fusion for ice, which is approximately 334 J/g. First, convert 2.0 kJ to joules (2.0 kJ = 2000 J). Then, divide the total energy by the latent heat: ( \frac{2000 , \text{J}}{334 , \text{J/g}} \approx 5.99 , \text{g} ). Thus, about 6 grams of ice can be melted by 2.0 kJ of energy.
No.
No light has no mass its only an energy. There would be no way to capture it. Therefore light can not be melted. <><><><><> Actually, light does have mass, but that has nothing to do with whether or not it can be melted.
Yes, ice is melted by heating.
No because the ice has melted.