Ice is cold.
Yes, using hot water instead of cold water can make clearer ice because it contains fewer impurities that can cause cloudiness in the ice.
Normal cold ice is water in its solid form. Hot ice water is water WITH sodiumacetate disolved in it. (official name: sodium ethanoate, Na+CH3COO-) If you touch it, you will trigger a exothermic reaction, that means it creates heat. That's why it's called cold hot ice. So hot ice actually isn't real ice.
The temperatures of hot and cold water can vary, but typically hot water is around 120-140°F while cold water is around 40-60°F. When frozen, both hot and cold water will reach the same temperature of 32°F (0°C) as they solidify into ice.
The answer depends on where the ice cube is in relation to the stove: it could be conduction, convection or radiation.
because atoms in hot water vibrate faster, and cold water vibrates slower, hence movement generates heat, heat speeds up the ice cube's atoms, as the ice cube's atoms speed up it begins to expand, spread out it's mass and melt.
Cold
Hot
fire to ice ice to fire
No it is cold
it was the cold water.
Ice is neither hot or cold. Technically, nothing is cold. Everythin is based on energy. The more energy something has, the more "heat" it puts off. Ice feels cold against our skin because it has less energy than we do.
cold pack contains cold stuff like ice, hot pack stuuf like fire
Hot Blooded (to go with Cold as Ice).
I don't think that is possible. How can "hot" make "cool" water "cold"? (also, 'hot ice' is boiling water)
As they are both ice then neither. They are already in that state of matter.
the ice will melt
No. Hail is ice; it is cold.