It depends on the surrounding temperature. Water freezes at 0 degrees C, or 32 degrees F. Indeed, water can get colder than its freezing point. Consider the ice cubes in the freezer. If you put a thermometer inside with the cubes, you will discover the interior of the freezing compartment is almost always well below water's freezing point of 0 C (32 F). Think about it: I you were to drop an ice cube into liquid nitrogen at -195.5 C, the ice cube would cool to -195.5 C.
Probably below zero Celsius. Above zero, the cube will melt. The ice cubes in my refrigerator are about -20 Celsius; setting the fridge colder than that would just waste electricity.
Assuming you mean water ice, and assuming standard pressure, ice has a temperature of zero degrees Celsius or less.
0 degrees
0 摄氏度
852
simple the melting point of water is approximately 30 degrees Fahrenheit so keep the atmosphere around the ice cube less then 30 degrees Fahrenheit and your ice cube will not melt
No. ICE is the solid form of WATER. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and it becomes ice. The cube is just the shape of it, it's not important chemically.
it depends on the surroundings temp
It depends on the temperature and the size of the ice cube.
It would change from a solid to a liquid.
33 degrees Celsius
32 degrees F.
yes, unless you keep the temperature under 32 F degrees (0 C) the ice cube will melt.
Ice cube has 90 cars
0.1 degrees Celsius
0 degrees celcius
An ice cube.
there are six sides on a ice cube
simple the melting point of water is approximately 30 degrees Fahrenheit so keep the atmosphere around the ice cube less then 30 degrees Fahrenheit and your ice cube will not melt
frozen water An ice cube is a cube (or other shape) that is simply frozen water that has been in an area that is 32 degrees or colder for a certain amount of time.
1 degrees Celsius
Set at 58 degrees.