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Water turns into gas at a temperature of 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit at sea level. This gas is called steam.
Answer:when water is heated it starts to turn in to steam or water vapour so in conclusion it steams before boiling point of witch is 212 degres celcius.First of all it's spelled Celsius not (Celsius) . 2nd it's which not (witch).3rd it's vapor not (Vapour.) And 4th at sea level water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit not Celsius . If that were the case the water would be 413.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
Oxygen's melting point is -218 therefore from a solid it will turn into a liquid at 183 ('c) is its boiling point so it is liquid
It would heat to 100 degrees C, and then begin to boil. The water vapor would be at 100C, and would rise away. If you kept the vapor combined, it would pressurize the container.
Do you mean, how does the pressure of water vapor at 10˚C compare with its pressure at 50˚C?The vapor pressure of water is the pressure at which steam is saturated. Above this pressure, the water would begin to condense. In a gas mixture saturated with water vapor, the vapor pressure is equal to the partial pressure. The vapor pressure is a function of temperature. Many equations of state can predict vapor pressures of liquids but the best ones are also rather complex and require considerable expertise to use. For most purposes, there are several simpler empirical equations which can estimate the vapor pressures of liquids with sufficient accuracy for most purposes.One of the simplest is the Antoine equation which has the form:log10Pvap = A - B/(C+T) where the Pressure (P) is in mmHg and the Temperature (T) is in °C.For water in the range from 1 °C to 100 °C, the constants have the values:A = 8.07131B = 1730.63C = 233.426Using these values, the vapor pressure of water can be estimated as:Pvap(@10 °C) = 9.158817 mmHgPvap(@50 °C) = 92.29989 mmHg... so the vapor pressure of water at 50 °C is roughly 10 times the vapor pressure at 10 °C.
* Begin by multiplying the Celsius temperature by 9. * Divide the answer by 5. * Now add 32. * 47 degrees Celsius=116.6 Fahrenheit
PVC softens at about 104 degrees Celsius, or 219.2 degrees Fahrenheit.
The minimum temperature is about 10,000,000 degrees Celsius.
No, it is liquid at 1 degree C. It will begin to freeze at 0 degrees C.
It will start to melt if the temperature rises above 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees FahrenheitOfficially, the melting temperature of ice is zero degrees Celsius (or 32F). The freezing temperature does vary dependent on the electrolytes added to the water solution. For example, ocean water (salt water), freezes at ~-18 degrees Celsius (or 0F). Various solutions at different concentration of solute offer various degrees of melting/freezing. At 0 degrees Celsius.
If heated to and above boiling point the pressure in the bottle would begin to rise. Depending on how much it is heated it might either stay like that, or the increased pressure might cause the bottle to burst.
Ice will melt when the surrounding temperature is above 0.C (Zero Degrees Celsius)
* Begin by subtracting 32 from the Fahrenheit number. * Divide the answer by 9. * Then multiply that answer by 5.
Absolute zero was found in extensive lab experiments to be -273.15° C. The absolute scale was defined to begin at absolute zero, use Celsius-size degrees, and call them "Kelvins". So K = C + 273.15 Kelvins and C = K - 273.15 degrees Celsius.
104 degree Celsius because impurities increase the boiling point.
Water turns into gas at a temperature of 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit at sea level. This gas is called steam.
"Pure" water freezes at a temperature of 0 (zero) degrees Celsius.This is for normal atmospheric pressure. The Celsius scale was defined by the freezing and boiling points of water, with 100 equal intervals (degrees) between them.Melting vs Freezing PointIce melts at 0° Celsius, this is how it is defined. Water can be cooled below 0°C if it contains ions in solution. Pure water will begin to freeze at 0°C, but requires the removal of additional energy (heat of fusion) to change phase into crystalline ice. Zero degrees 0°cif you're saying celsius the its 0 degreesFreezing point- 0 degrees C Depends on the pressure and anything dissolved in the water. ANYTHING FROM -18C - 4 Cwater freezes at 0 degrees Celsius0 degrees C. Boils- 100 degrees C.At about 0 degrees Celsius.