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Recently I boarded a flight and noticed outside air temperature as -53°C at an altitude of 36860ft (11.23km). I don't know what causes such a freezing temperature in that altitude but was wondering higher altitudes (space) may have even freezing temperatures. Here I got a doubt i.e what happens if an ice cube is left in space? Would it be melting or stay as it is?

Mithoron
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Praveen Kadambari
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4 Answers4

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It depends on where in outer space you are.

If you simply stick it in orbit around the Earth, it'll sublimate: the mean surface temperature of something at Earth's distance from the Sun is about 220K, which is solidly in the vapor phase for water in a vacuum, and the solid-vapor transition at that temperature doesn't pass through the liquid phase. On the other hand, if you stick your ice cube out in the Oort Cloud, it'll grow: the mean surface temperature is 40K or below, well into the solid phase, so it'll pick up (or be picked up by) gas and other objects in space.

A comet is a rough approximation to an ice cube. If you think of what happens to a comet at various places, that's about what would happen to your ice cube.

Mark
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  • @Mark You said anything at earth's distance from the sun is about 220k which is -53.15°C.How can water be in vapor phase in such a freezing temperature? – Praveen Kadambari May 07 '14 at 03:52
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    @PraveenKadambari Because there's no atmospheric pressure. See Wikipedia's phase diagram of water: the phase depends on both temperature and pressure, and as the pressure drops, so does the freezing point. In non-scientific terms, you can think of it as there being no air to help hold the ice together, so it takes more cold to do so. – Mark May 07 '14 at 04:25
  • In the Oort cloud, I don't think there's a whole lot of gas and other objects for it to pick up (though we probably don't have a good estimate for its density). – Keith Thompson Jul 11 '14 at 20:42
  • What if the ice cube was shaded from the Sun and wedged against the metal side of a spacecraft such as the Gaia orbital observatory? – steveOw Dec 25 '14 at 23:56
  • @steveOw, the shading doesn't matter over the long run: the shade will reach thermal equilibrium with the Sun and in turn heat the ice cube. The spacecraft makes things too difficult to figure out, because it actively controls the temperature of its environment. – Mark Dec 26 '14 at 02:58
  • Gaia has a continuing problem with unexpected icing over a year after launch and presumably any deliberate spacecraft activities would be intended to increase temperature in the affected area. Presumably the "long run" for equilibration in this case is more than a few months? – steveOw Dec 27 '14 at 22:44
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    @steveOw, Gaia has active thermal management (both heating and cooling), and is not in equilibrium with its surroundings. The "long run" for equilibration hasn't even started yet. – Mark Dec 28 '14 at 01:20
  • @Mark I need some education here. At 15 PSI, 270K, ice is in the solid phase i.e. an ice cube in your freezer. Yet over time, ice cubes in the freezer get smaller, presumably due to sublimation. What changes going from solid at 15 PSI 270K to solid at vacuum (or close to) and 40K? – dgnuff Apr 02 '18 at 19:13
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    @dgnuff, in the freezer, the ice cube sublimates and the water vapor re-freezes on the other surfaces of the freezer (hence the need to periodically defrost it). In space, the only available surface for re-freezing is the ice cube (and at 40K, the sublimation is a lot slower than at 270K). – Mark Apr 02 '18 at 21:29
  • Need to consider how transparent the ice is (ie, how low is the albedo) to know what the temperature is. – eshaya Apr 03 '22 at 19:48
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It would sublimate. The frozen mass of water would decrease in size as the water converts from a solid to a gas (without becoming a liquid) and drifts away.

LDC3
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  • Unless you are in a suit, you wouldn't survive either. – LDC3 May 04 '14 at 22:35
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    Why would the ice cube sublimate ? – Nicolas Barbulesco May 05 '14 at 20:01
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    @NicolasBarbulesco There is very little gas surrounding the ice cube in space. If the ice is above 40 K, as pointed out above, there is enough heat in the ice for some of the molecules to leave the chunk of ice and become a gas. – LDC3 May 06 '14 at 01:57
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In the vacuum of space the most important consideration is to consider how much radiation an ice cube would absorb from, for example, nearby stars and how fast the ice cube itself would radiate away energy (using Wien's law), finding what ice cube temperature would produce an equilibrium (the temperature at which the ice cube radiate energy at the same rate it absorbed energy) and then determining if that temperature is above or below the melting point of the ice cube. If it is above the melting point (of water in a vacuum), then as the other answers have said the ice cube would sublimate; if it is below the melting point then the ice cube would stay frozen.

Specifically for an ice cube that is a cube in orbit around the sun with one side facing the sun you would need to calculate how much energy the side facing the sun absorbs from the sun as well as how much energy radiates away from all six sides of the cube and then find the equilibrium temperature.

NeutronStar
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The ice cube will rotate when particles and light strike its sides.Also any ionized water molecules will interact with the sun's magnetic field and cause the ice cube to be deflected sideways or up or down