The air molecules would go very slow because the air molecules are tight close together.
1000 ft per second. the speed of sound because air molecules are bumping against each other.
When fresh water reaches a temperature of 212 degrees, the water molecules enter a highly agitated state, causing them to vibrate and fly around very fast. The higher the temperature, the faster the molecules move. Eventually, when the water is at 212 degrees, the molecules are moving fast enough to actually throw themselves out of the minor bonds that held them together originally, casting them out of the liquid to enter the air as a gas.
In physics, heat is a kind of energy; therefore it is measured in joules. (The old-fashioned unit "calorie" is also often used.)
If You're suggesting what happens to water when heated then the answer is: Water molecules speed up by the heat increasing it's temperature and when it reaches 100 Degrees the molecules are so fast that the water turn into a gas (Steam) But if you are just asking about the temperature then; When you heat water the temperature also increases.
Hypo and hypertonic have nothing to do with moving fast. They have to do with concentrations of solutes in solvents. The movement is probably molecules and that depends on temperature.
The temperature of human urine is 98.6. But its cools fast just like water.
When fresh water reaches a temperature of 212 degrees, the water molecules enter a highly agitated state, causing them to vibrate and fly around very fast. The higher the temperature, the faster the molecules move. Eventually, when the water is at 212 degrees, the molecules are moving fast enough to actually throw themselves out of the minor bonds that held them together originally, casting them out of the liquid to enter the air as a gas.
Yes there is. The heat or thermal temperature in an object is how fast the molecules in it are moving. You may know that there is such thing as absolute zero, which is when those molecules are not moving at all. But is there a maximum temperature? In the universe, there is a universal speed limit which is the speed of light (671 million miles per hour or 1.08 billion km per hour). The maximum speed those molecules could go is almost the speed of light because only light can go that fast. That would be 140,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 degrees Celsius. That is 140 nonillion degrees.
Just as soon as its temperature has dropped to 32 degrees (Fahrenheit, or 0° Celsius), and the heat of fusion has leaked out of it, it solidifies, I guarantee.
maybe it goes fast and it just hits the cement or ground hard.....
maybe it goes fast and it just hits the cement or ground hard.....
Enzymes in the human body work best at human body temperature, so about 35-40 degrees (Celsius). A lower temperature would have too low of an effect to be able to sustain life, and a higher temperature causes the enzyme to denature (unravel) and be rendered ineffective.
Temperature measures how fast molecules are moving or in scientific terms it measures the AVERAGE KINETIC ENERGY in a system. Temperature measures how fast molecules are moving. :):)
Temperature
In 50 degrees Fahrenheit, chocolate does not melt. In 50 degrees Celsius, chocolate melts in a couple of minutes but in the end burns. The ideal temperature to melt chocolate is 80-85 degrees Fahrenheit.
It depends on the temperature of the ice. The fastest it would be, if the temperature of the ice is 0 °C. But if it is lower than that, warming process takes longer.
In physics, heat is a kind of energy; therefore it is measured in joules. (The old-fashioned unit "calorie" is also often used.)
If You're suggesting what happens to water when heated then the answer is: Water molecules speed up by the heat increasing it's temperature and when it reaches 100 Degrees the molecules are so fast that the water turn into a gas (Steam) But if you are just asking about the temperature then; When you heat water the temperature also increases.