Materials:

Small paper cups, bowls, or an ice cube tray

Glass of water

String (Yarn or kite string works great)

Small Stick

Salt

Procedure:

  1. Fill the cup or tray up with water and place it in the freezer. (You can also use the ice cubes from your freezer and skip this step)
  2. When the water is frozen, remove the ice from the cup or tray.
  3. Put the ice in the glass of water. The cube will bob up and down in the water, and then float on the top.
  4. Place one end of the string from the fishing pole on top of the ice cube and sprinkle salt on the ice where the string is touching.
    1. Watch as the water melts slightly and refreezes.
  5. After about 10 seconds, carefully life the ice cube out of the water with the fishing pole. You caught a fish (ice)

Why?:

Ordinary water freezes at (32° F). When you add salt to water, it lowers the water’s freezing temperature-it has to get colder than 32° F to freeze.How much colder depends on how much salt is mixed in with the water. The salt you sprinkle on the ice cube lowers its freezing temperature and, since the ice cube can’t get any colder than it already is, it starts to melt. A little pool of water forms on top of the ice cube and the string sinks into it. As the ice cube melts, it dilutes the salt/water mixture in the little pool; the freezing point starts to go back up again. The ice refreezes, trapping the string. As soon as the ice cube hardens, you can raise it by lifting the string. All this happens very quickly, of course.

Check out a video here!