It is called adiabatic or an adiabatic process.
the amount of heat required to change the state from liquid to vapour of unit mass without changing the temperature
As the temperature of a liquid decreases the amount of gas that can be dissolved increases.
No, temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the individual particles of a substance. Thermal energy is a term sometimes used to refer to the internal energy present in a system in a state of thermodynamic equilibrium by virtue of its temperature, or heat.
The temperature at which the substance boils is the temperature at which it boils. It's not the temperature at which any certain amount of it boils.
I wonder that by increasing temperature it will lead to a higher pressure.
The amount of gas present in the bag will increase as the dry ice sublimates.
The type of fatty acids in the triglycerides, the amount of water present and if food additives are present.
Temperature is a measure of the kinetic energy of the particles in a substance. Temperature in Kelvin is proportional to kinetic energy of particles. Heat on the other hand depends on the amount of substance present.
The relative humidity.
In the context of water vapour, it is "relative humidity".
The thickness of magma may be indicated by its measured temperature, its color, and the speed of its flow.
Higher temperature means greater energy content compared to a lower temperature. The energy required to change the temperature is proportional to the mass of the system, the specific heat capacity, and the temperature change.
The amount typical is commensurate to the actual damages and accompanying losses incurred by the claimant.
without salt water melts at 0 c or 32 f. It boils at 100 c or 212 f. Depending on the amount of salt, it melts at a lower temperature and boils at a higher temperature.
Yes. It depends on the amount of gas present (as well as the temperature of the gas.)
Because water has a very high specific heat and is capable of absorbing a large amount of heat energy without changing temperature.
Amount (temperature) or A(t)