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It is not the same:105 degrees Fahrenheit = 40.56 degrees Celsius.105 degrees Celsius = 221 degrees Fahrenheit.
The normal body temperature is 98.6 degrees. If your body heat exceeds 105 degrees, you are most likely going to die.
4.2 × 105 J
Depends on what kind of tire and tube. Mountain bikes how lower pressure, but a higher volume. Usually about 40 PSI. Road bikes have a higher pressure, but a lower volume. Mine are at 105 PSI when I ride.
105 pounds is 7.5 stone.
at 105 degreesCelsius,steam is still steam.at about 50,000 degrees Celsius,steam turns into plasma, the fourth state of matter.
You mean how much heat energy will be lost/transferred as you are losing Joules here. All in steam, so a simple q problem and no change of state. 2.67 kg = 2670 grams q = (2670 grams steam)(2.0 J/gC)(105 C - 282 C) = - 9.45 X 105 Joules ----------------------------------- This much heat energy must be lost to lower the temperature of the steam.
105 degrees Celsius = 221 degrees Fahrenheit
The volume is 16,85 L.
the 30L water vapor sample is a gas gases exert pressure on their surroundings thus taking on the shape of their containers the gas is under 1 ATM of pressure so it exerts pressure in return and the volume becomes 30L when the presures are equal if the temperature were to decrease to room temperature, the water vapor would condense to a liquid and the volume would decrease liquids have a volume but no definite shape while gases have neither a definite volume or shape
Asia is at 30 degrees north and 105 degrees east.
It is not the same:105 degrees Fahrenheit = 40.56 degrees Celsius.105 degrees Celsius = 221 degrees Fahrenheit.
Steam at 105 c
30 degrees north and 105 degrees each is in Sichuan Sheng, China, on the continent of Asia.
105 degrees Fahrenheit = 40.56 degrees Celsius
105 degrees Celsius = 221 degrees Fahrenheit. [°F] = [°C] × 9⁄5 + 32
Cosec(105 deg) = 1.0353