Indeed it does. If you subjected a wet substance to a vacuum pump, the water would evaporate, and as the hotter molecules escape first.
The substance gets colder and colder as the vacuum pressure decreases, eventually becoming an ice form from which it continues to sublimate.
0 degrees or there abouts
The teamperature does not change
yES
Place the container of water in a vacuum & it should start to boil at room temperature.
for example :ice can change the temperature of water
vacuum is measured in inches of mercury. sea level is zero. water will boil at 212F. as negative pressure or elevation increases the boiling temp. of water decreases. if you had a pressure reading of 29.7 in" of mercury the water will boil at 192F. if you had a pressure reading of 10 in" of mercury water will boil at 32F
The teamperature does not change
A perfect (completely empty) vacuum would have no temperature, since temperature implies movement of particles. However, any real vacuum has some particles (the density is simply less than normal air pressure, for instance); the temperature in this case can vary, just as the temperature of air, or the temperature of water, can vary.
yES
temperature of the water
Place the container of water in a vacuum & it should start to boil at room temperature.
for example :ice can change the temperature of water
100 Degrees F
Not significantly, but it will change the temperature that water boils at.
You can you change liquid water into a solid (ice) by lowering its temperature. You can you change liquid water into a gas (water vapor) by raising its temperature.
In a vacuum temperature is inapplicable. Temperature is a measure of the kinetic energy of the molecules that fill a defined space. In a vacuum there are no molecules so --- no temperature.
Yes, winds can change the tempertaure of water.
it does not change