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No, Celsius is a temperature scale.
25 degrees Celsius.
Water changes state from liquid to solid when it reaches a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a simple example of changing from liquid to solid, or freezing.
A temperature of 350 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to a temperature of 176.67 degrees Celsius.
A temperature of 91 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to a temperature of 32.78 degrees Celsius.
pure sodium melts at 97 degree celsius and boils at 882 degree celsius but no idea of evaporating temperature.......
in atmospheric pressure water evaporates at 100 degrees Celsius and freeze at 0 degrees Celsius. This may vary based on pressure
It rose to 100 degrees Celsius. The water starts to evaporate?
It will evaporate at any temperature, as long as the humidity is less than 100%. It does evaporate much faster at higher temperatures though. Technically the boiling point of pure water is 100 degrees C, so that is the temperature at which it becomes gas.
No, Celsius is a temperature scale.
Easy, heat it up to a temperature above 100 degrees Celsius with a Bunsen or something
Bottle brush can still grow in a temperature up to -6 degrees Celsius. They can perfectly grow under full sunlight with moderate amount of water.
the temperature for hot oatmeal in Celsius is about 74 Celsius
Zero Celsius
248.15 K
No.
5 degrees below 2 Celsius is -3 Celsius.