Frozen Lake
While the boiling water is at a higher temperature, the iceberg contains significantly more thermal energy due to its larger mass. The iceberg has stored more heat energy to maintain its frozen state, whereas the boiling water is closer to its boiling point but has less overall energy.
Icebergs contain thermal energy because they are formed from frozen water molecules that have a certain amount of heat energy absorbed from their surroundings. This heat energy is released when the ice melts, contributing to the overall available thermal energy in the iceberg.
Freezing involves releasing thermal energy, which is removed from the substance being frozen. This causes the temperature of the substance to decrease until it reaches its freezing point, at which point it solidifies.
Boiling.
No. You will be boiling hot in fact! You won't be frozen, you will be boiled.
Any object above zero kelvin - in other words, any object - has thermal energy. If you cook down a liquid - reduce its thermal energy - it will sooner or later get cold enough to become a solid.
No. That raises the temperature too high.
No, when a liquid freezes, it undergoes a phase change from liquid to solid but does not lose chemical energy. The energy required for freezing is used to reorganize the molecules in the liquid into a solid structure, but the chemical energy of the molecules remains the same.
Yes, when liquid particles freeze, they release energy in the form of heat to their surrounding environment. However, individual particles do not gain energy during the freezing process, but rather lose energy as they transition from a higher energy liquid state to a lower energy solid state.
melted
europa
"Wave energy" can be a lot of things, you need a more specific question. Energy that travels in "waves" includes a lot of things such as: Radiation, thermal energy, even matter (which has both a wave length and unless frozen, has energy). So... no natural gas is not more available then "wave energy".