Because of the immence pressure at the bottom of the ocean the water is unable to turn to gas so does not actually boil. It remains in a super heated liguid state and quickly rises through the colder water until the water presure is such that the water can expand into gas or cools to the temperature of the water around it.
Twilight Zone
Boil a lot of sea water.
At the bottom of the Mariana Trench (Pacific Ocean), where water pressure is about eight tons per square inch.
Boil it. The water will evaporate, leaving salt at the bottom of the pot, which did not evaporate and was left behind.
salt water will boil. also will freshwaer
Higher pressure increases boiling point. This means that as the pressure increases, the liquid must become hotter to boil. From a theoretical point of view, with the water being heated equally throughout, the water at the top of the pot would boil first because it is under less pressure than the water at the bottom.
As the water completely evaporates, the salt and other impurities in the water will sink to the bottom of the pot, no matter where the water originated from.
Boil a lot of sea water.
The coldest water in the ocean is the bottom of the ocean.
Not the whole ocean of course, it is much too large. However at the point where lava enters the ocean some water will definitely boil off.
No. There is water at the bottom of the ocean. There is oxygen in the water that a fish can breath in through it's gills.
The Titanic is still at the bottom of the ocean.
There are fresh water lakes
The arrangement of water masses in the southern Atlantic Ocean from the surface to the bottom is Antarctic Intermediate water, north Atlantic deep water, and the Antarctic bottom water. The location where water flow uninterrupted between the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Indian Oceans is in the southern ocean.
boil the water away, leaving the salt in the bottom of the pot or whatever you used.
bottom of sea/ocean in water
Benthic, it pertains to the botoom of the ocean or any body of water.
At the bottom of the Mariana Trench (Pacific Ocean), where water pressure is about eight tons per square inch.