100* C or 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, the experiment does not show that cold water boils faster than hot water.
When a hot enough object meets water, some of the water boils instantly. As any substance boils it expands.
Temperature of water should be around 100oC.
130c is very hot (water boils at 100c)
It will be the boiling point of water: 100oC
1. Boiling in hot water. 2. Boiling on vapour.
No, hot water boils faster than cold water because it is already closer to the boiling point.
it gets hot
Hot water boils faster than cold water because it is closer in temperature to the boiling point. The boiling point of water is 100oC. If we had hot water at 90oC and cold water at 20oC, then the hot one would reach the boiling point of 100oC faster, since it only has 10oC more to go adn less heat needs to be added.ummm... hot water and hot water boil at the same rate...
Hot water boils faster than cold water because it is closer in temperature to the boiling point. The boiling point of water is 100oC. If we had hot water at 90oC and cold water at 20oC, then the hot one would reach the boiling point of 100oC faster, since it only has 10oC more to go adn less heat needs to be added.ummm... hot water and hot water boil at the same rate...
Hot water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius at sea level.
The water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. That would be 212 in Fahrenheit and 372.15 in Kelvin.