The simplest is that one of the cubes is hollow - except that in that case it would not be a proper cube.
The next simplest answer is the amount of air dissolved in the water before it was frozen.
A more complex answer is the proportions of heavier isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen in the water molecules.
No. There are many, many different kinds of solid, and they come in a variety of densities. Something like a brick is fairly heavy, but if it was made of wood, it would be a lot lighter and a lot less dense. There are a zillion other examples that could be cited.
yes ice cubes do melt faster with different objects in it like hoter objrcts will melt it faster tho
the ice cubes are floating in the water
If Ice cubes are melting in water, the temperature of both the ice cubes and the water will be exactly the freezing temperature of water: 32F, 0C. You cannot change this. You can add heat to make the ice cubes melt faster, but the extra heat will have no effect on the temperature, It will all go to melting the ice cubes.
icecubes are less dense than water because when water freezes it expands giving it greater volume but the same mass
Two cubes are exactly the same size. The cube that is made of the material with the largest density will have the largest mass.
Two cubes are exactly the same size. The cube that is made of the material with the largest density will have the largest mass.
Depends on the dimensions of the prism, and how large of cubes they are.
The density is(mass of the cube)/(15.625)
As long as the cubes are 1x1x1 then any box with an equivalent volume would hold the same number of cubes. The volume of the 3x4x10 box is 120. So a box with the dimensions 1x1x120 would work just as well as a box with the dimensions 12x10x1 or 2x5x12.
The answer depends on their relative dimensions.
2 cubes = 4 prisms
Ice cubes don't sink in water, as the density of an ice cube is less than the density of water.
The generalization of a cube to four dimensions.
A few object types are cubes, spheres, and cylinders.
The question cannot be answered without information about the masses of the cubes.
They are all cubes. They are all made of molecules. They are all the same size. They don't have the same density. They all have atoms. I could go on for a while!