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Why do wet fingers stick to ice?

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Answer: Water freezes bonding finger to ice

Cold attracts moistureWrong. Temperature doesn't attract. Water on finger freezes upon contact with ice surface, forming ice bond that sticks finger to block.

Water freezes bonding finger to iceCorrect! Water on finger is liquid (~body temp). Ice cube is well below 0°C. Contact transfers heat from water to ice rapidly—water freezes almost instantly. Frozen water creates ice bridge bonding finger skin to ice cube. Stronger than you'd expect! Pull hard = skin damage. Pour warm water to melt bond safely. Same principle: tongue on frozen metal pole in winter. Don't try it!

Static electricity holds themWrong. No static electricity. Sticking is freezing—water on finger solidifies upon ice contact, forming mechanical bond.

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