Yes and No.. Water's temperature can only rise until it boils, at which point the temperature remains at the boiling point. On Earth, at sea level, with pure water, that temperature is 212F, so water cannot get past 212. However, there are cases where water can go past its typical boiling point. Water on Jupiter is well over 212 and yet it doesn't boil because of the heavier atmosphere there. If you put water in a sealed container, where the pressure is higher than Earth's atmospheric pressure, the boiling point would be higher and as a result, the water would reach a higher temperature before boiling. Note: If you heat water in a super-smooth container, boiling will be inhibited because there is nothing for the water to boil off of. In this case, the water can be superheated past the boiling point. This happens occasionally if you microwave water in a new bottle or mug, and then, when someone moves the container or puts a spoon into it, it boils violently, sometimes scalding the unexpecting cook.
Yes, under extra pressure water temperature can be raised above normal bioling point 212 oF (Steam engines, pressure cookers and autoclaves work that way)
Example: 250 oF at about 1 atm. extra pressure
Yes. At standard pressure it boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit, but in a pressure vessel it can be heated above that without boiling, and of course it's still possible to heat water vapor even after it boils.
There is not enough pressure at sea level to raise the temperature of water above 212° F without it boiling. As a substance changes state from liquid to gas, all heat that it receives goes toward the change of state, so the temperature of water remains at 212° F until the entire volume of water is converted to steam.
Yes, under high pressure or with the addition of a nonvolatile solute water can remain liquid above 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Yes pure water can be hotter than 220 F, under pressure, like a heating boiler or pressure cooker, or in other pressure vessels
Yes. Water can be thousands of degrees. It can even be liquid at temperatures above 212 degrees, if it's at a high enough pressure.
Yes, if pressurized.
The Fahrenheit scale has water boiling at 212 degrees. 100 degreesCelsius/Centigrade.
Water in a car radiator does not normally boil. In some old cars, the cooling systems would run at about 220 degrees Fahrenheit. The pressure would be high enough so that the water would boil at 250 degrees. Today, you do not put water in radiators but coolant. It is much more efficient than water for cooling engines.
If it is greater than 180, subtract 180 (270 degrees - 180 = 90 Degrees). If it is less than 180, add 180 (40 Degrees + 180 = 220 Degrees) Now the question is, what is the formula that will do this in MS Excel?
mercury is hotter than mars because mars is like an ice world but with all ice surrounding it. Mercury is 500x closer to the Sun than Mars Mercury's temp ranges from -297deg f to 801 deg f Mars temp ranges from -220 to 68 deg f
water boil`s faster at lower pressure at higher pressure the temperature needs to be higher for instance at 16 bar [don`t know the psi for that ]the temp is about 220 degrees Celsius
water temperature. 180-220 degrees
220 degrees celsius is 428 degrees fahrenheit.
220 degrees Celsius = 428 degrees Fahrenheit.
The Fahrenheit scale has water boiling at 212 degrees. 100 degreesCelsius/Centigrade.
An angle of 220 degrees is a reflex angle
220 degrees Celsius = 428 degrees Fahrenheit.
2250
The owners manual that came with the 87 Corvette states this (If you have one) the book says 219 to 245. Yep that seems high to me but that is what its says. The oil temperature usually runs about 20 degrees hotter than the water temp. My 87 water runs around 220 in winter to around 236 in summer traffic. I did install a secondary fan for heavy summer driving and turn it on around 229 degrees. My Vet. has about 53,000 miles on it.
It takes longer for mortar to bind rather than cement. Think of cooking a roast at 150 degrees (mortar) rather than cement 220 degrees, On 150 degrees the roast will cook slowly and beautifully as opposed to cement at 220 chance of burning the outside before the inside cooks.
It is a reflex angle which is greater than 180 but less than 360 degrees
5000 degrees do the fish stay nice and warm. I'm just kidding. You do not boil water for your fish tank but if your wondering water boils around 220 degrees
220ºF = 104.44ºC