Dry ice is called so because it consists of solid carbon dioxide, rather than water ice. When dry ice melts, it sublimates directly into carbon dioxide gas, without leaving a liquid residue, which is why it is termed as "dry" ice.
The ratio of dry ice volume to mass depends on the temperature at which the dry ice is stored, as dry ice sublimes at -78.5°C. At this temperature, the volume of dry ice is about 832 cm³ per 1 kg of mass. Keep in mind that this ratio may vary slightly due to factors such as pressure and purity of the dry ice.
No, oxygen in its standard gaseous state does not contain plasma. Plasma is the fourth state of matter, distinct from gases, and is created by ionizing gases to produce a highly excited collection of atoms and free electrons.
Dry ice is not an element, but rather a solid form of carbon dioxide, a compound made of carbon and oxygen. It does not occur naturally on Earth.
It is not recommended to mix dry ice with regular ice because dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, which will sublimate into a gas at a very cold temperature. Mixing it with regular ice may cause the regular ice to freeze faster and crack due to the extreme cold of the dry ice. It is best to keep them separate for safety reasons.
No. Dry ice does not contain water. (CO2)
False - dry ice does not contain water; it is frozen carbon dioxide
It is usually a solid, which sublimates at room temperature to form a gas.
Many things contain plasma mostly things in the sky.
A Plasma must contain many ions and electrons.
it depend on how it starts most of them do have plasma
plasma
Solid CO2 is called dry ice.
No. But plasma does contain glucose, urea, albumin and fibrinogen.
When you turn it on, yes. The glowing electrical arcs contain plasma.
No
Pluto's thin atmosphere does contain some amount of ionized gas, or plasma, but not on the same scale as planets with more substantial atmospheres like Earth. The solar wind compresses and interacts with Pluto's atmosphere, creating regions of ionized gases.