boiling point.
Each liquid boils at a different temperature, but the temperature it boils at is called the Boiling Point. For example, the boiling point of water is 212 Fahrenheit.This specific temprature is dependant on the pressureon the liquid at that time, as an example at ahigher temperatures the boiling point is higher.
A substance has different phases, but it only boils at a certain temperature. If it is over that temperature it will evaporate or if it is under that temperature it won't boil.
The boiling point of twice the amount of liquid will remain 150 degrees. The boiling point of a substance is determined by the chemical properties of the substance itself, rather than the quantity of the substance.
The temperature at which a liquid boils is called its boiling point.
Every substance has their own boiling point.
It is the Boiling point.
There is nothing called "condensation point". At least not such thing related to do condensation of gases. But there is a fixed point at a certain pressure, called "boiling point", means, the temperature at which a liquid boils. But condensation does not occur at a fixed temperature like boiling. Think this way, you can see water drops on a cold bottle that occur by condensation of water vapor in the air. For this, just a cold bottle is enough, not a bottle at a certain temperature.
Because you are not changing the composition of the substance, boils is a physical property.
The state of matter just before a substance boils is typically a liquid. As the substance is heated, its temperature rises until it reaches the boiling point, at which point it starts vaporizing into a gas.
The boiling temperature of a pure substance is unique and specific to that substance. It is determined by its molecular structure and strength of intermolecular forces. This characteristic boiling temperature is referred to as the substance's normal boiling point.
The boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid turns into a gas.
This is the boiling point.