Ice floating and cooling the upper part of a drink should start a natural convection type cycle which cools the whole drink. If the ice sank, you’d have a very warm surface layer. Never thought about this with focus before 😅

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    121 year ago

    It’s even more important than your drink! The fact that I’ve floats is what allows ice to act as an insulator on top of frozen lakes and oceans. If it sank, liquid water would take its place and freeze. After a while the whole body of water would be frozen.

    • SoPunny
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      21 year ago

      That makes sense, but it’s not something I’ve ever thought of. Neat :)

  • @Eczpurt
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    31 year ago

    Never thought of this either! Makes me curious of the efficiency vs say a whiskey stone or equivalent

    • @Gandalf1701D
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      61 year ago

      Stones are less effective overall because they don’t melt. A very substantial part of the temperature change you get from putting ice in something is actually from thermal energy in the liquid going towards breaking the bonds between molecules that comprise solid ice in order to make it water. Without that sink for heat, you’ll still cool your drink by allowing the colder solid to absorb heat from the liquid, but the temperature change will not be nearly as much.

  • @Tankaus
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    31 year ago

    And thus, the anti-straw coalition is born.