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When water is boiling, the temperature remains constant, as the energy it is absorbing is being used to change the liquid water into water vapor.
Yes, it remains same
I suppose the temperature would increase very briefly depending on how violently the ice was added. Carefully and slowly adding ice to water in order to minimize the water's displacement would, by definition, add kinetic energy to the localized water, but probably not enough to heat the water up. That kinetic energy would go towards breaking more bonds from the ice. However if you propelled the ice really fast into the water, one can only assume that the instantaneous increase of kinetic energy gained by the water would be greater than the kinetic energy being used to melt the ice, therefore (briefly) increasing the temperature.
no The temperature remains the same. The density between phases changes of course but the density within each phase remains the same.
No. For example when you heat boiling water, its temperature remains the same. the thermal energy will go to breaking the attraction between the atoms
Water remains a liquid over a large temperature range.
When water is boiling, the temperature remains constant, as the energy it is absorbing is being used to change the liquid water into water vapor.
fire, water, wind, earth and thunder
Usually it remains constant. For instance when you boil water and it turns into steam, the temperature of the boiling water remains at 100 Degrees Celsius throughout the process.
At room temperature, the density of sodium is slightly less than that of water and it will, briefly, float (briefly, because it will be rapidly reacting with the water, and may in fact be on fire at the time).
The temperature rise because of the gangnam dance
Alcohol, water, oil, and mercury come to mind.
The temperature remains the same. Water cannot get hotter than the boiling point.
Yes, it remains same
During boiling the temprature remains constant and as soon as the water is bolied the temprature again rises.
So long as the water remains liquid, the temperature measures between 27 and 32 decrees F.
the body temperature changes because of its surroundings