Yes. More often that not, it is colder than 0 deg C.
Yes, it can.
Water ice, at standard pressure, is either zero degrees Celsius or colder than that.
Water at 0 oC is ice.
well for something to freeze it has to be 0 degrees or lower which is what ice is, frozen water. so the water has to be 1 degree or more to NOT freeze so the ice is colder than salt watercoz salt water is not frozen... does t6hat make sense? Actually, salt water CAN be colder than ice because the salt lowers the freezing point of the water.
Some Ice would melt, absorbing heat (enthalpy for the phase transition). Since Salt Water has a lower freezing point than zero degrees, the liquid will cool down. This colder liquid will chill the ice (if it isn't already colder than zero) and the result will be a mixture of ice and water that is colder than zero degrees C. This is why adding salt to ice buckets can cool Champagne faster.
Ice
yes
0° celsius is 0° celsius, whether it's water, ice, dogfood, glass, stainless steel, or vodka.
Water ice, at standard pressure, is either zero degrees Celsius or colder than that.
It is not.
Because the Antarctic continent is a land mass covered with an ice sheet, and the Arctic is simply frozen sea ice, Antarctica is about -1 degree C (30 degrees F) colder than the Arctic.
Water at 0 oC is ice.
This is because the ice at 0 deg C is colder to the extent that the latent heat of freezing has been removed from the water at 0 deg C.
No, it is not. Ice cream is colder than snow.
Ice melts and forms at zero degrees Celsius or thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit. When an ice cube melts, the puddle forming beneath it may be the same temperature or a degree warmer than the ice cube.
becuse its colder
i think 1kg of ice
The water itself isn't frozen, so it doesn't have to be that cold. The ice in it only makes it colder than room temperature.