Assuming you put a bowl of ice cubes into the fridge (which is well isolated, but the temperatue is above freezing level). The ice will begin to melt. Even if you turn the fridge off, the temperature in the fridge will drop as the ice takes...
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_the_temperature_increase...
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Ice - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ice is a solid phase, usually crystalline, of a non-metallic substance that is liquid or gas at room temperature, such as carbon dioxide ice (dry ice), ammonia ice, or methane ice. However, the predo...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice
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Mostly water, some ice ... Back one ... Add heat...
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www.mnstate.edu/colson/petropuzzl/1d.html
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Back one ... Add heat...
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www.mnstate.edu/colson/petropuzzl/1f.html
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The melting point of ice and the freezing point of water are at exactly the same temperature. Normally we define this temperature as the temperature at which both the liquid and the solid phases are in equilibrium, that is, some liquid is freezing and some solid is melting at the same time.
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www.schools.ash.org.au/stkierans-manly/Classes/Yr6/6B/s...
www.schools.ash.org.au/stkierans-manly/Classes/Yr6/6B/science/melt.html
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Ice water (actually water with anything dissolved in it) will remain liquid at a lower temperature than pure water (this is why salts are used on icy roads -- it's easier to drive on a wet surface than on an icy surface).
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www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/chem00/chem00181.htm
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To set up a scale of temperatures requires agreement upon certain fixed points of temperature and a degree of temperature change. Two commonly used fixed points are the temperature at which ice melts (the ice point) and the temperature at which liquid water boils (the steam point), both under normal atmospheric pressure.
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water.me.vccs.edu/courses/ENV211/temperature.htm
water.me.vccs.edu/courses/ENV211/temperature.htm
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Melting an ICE CUBE ... Graph #2 shows the temperature of 5.5 g of H2O over the period from 0 to 2000 seconds while the internal energy of the H2O increases as shown in graph #1.
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www.princeton.edu/~gschmidt/Rider/lecture105/matter/mat...
www.princeton.edu/~gschmidt/Rider/lecture105/matter/matter_increasing_temperature/melting_ice_details.htm
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This knocks holes in the networks that record stream flow, precipitation, air temperature, and other climate data. ... He says, "Recent data show more of the same." Surface air temperatures are the warmest they have been in 400 years. Sea ice, glaciers, snow cover, and wind circulation all show changes consistent with...
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www.csmonitor.com/2002/0314/p16s02-sten.html
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