To melt Sour Patch Kids on the stove, place them in a small, heat-safe pot over low heat. Stir continuously to prevent them from sticking or burning, until they reach a gooey consistency. Once melted, you can pour the mixture into molds or use it as a topping for desserts. Be sure to monitor the temperature closely to avoid overheating.
A lightsaber. Also a stove, a magnifying glass (used with sunlight), a toaster oven, and practically any other heat source you can think of. Chocolate is easy to melt.
If you heat the chocolate up it will melt. Whether by stove, microwave or simply leaving it in the sun, it will eventually melt.
NO, you cannot iron a patch onto nylon, the nylon will melt. You will have to sew it on.
Yes and no. Like the plastic mantle of earth, you can make it go to a point where it sort of feels wobbly and feels much less dense when you eat it. I found this on accident when I left a candy near my computer's exhaust. (Note: Do not leave your sour patch kids near your computer's exhaust). To find a true melting point, you'd have to expose it to extreme heats, by use of say, a microwave. (Note: Do not put your sour patch kids in a microwave)
Sitting here on Earth, a stove will melt chocolate faster than the sun.
Oil, try it out on a stove.
You can melt Bleu Cheese with milk or cream on top of the stove. Go slow! Or you can melt it on top of a burger using a broiler!
quick melt is a kind of cheese that is easy to melt
Tin melts at 505 K.
The stove, sun, microwave and on your roof. It dapends on what you whant to melt.
Yes
No. It will melt first, then the water in it will boil.