Yes, provided they are both 26 degrees on the same scale (not water at 26 deg C and air at 26 deg F!)
100 degrees either way
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit. Unless, of course, you are boiling it by putting it in a vacuum without air and in that case it could be any temperature.
Water because of its higher conductivity. it is the air
There is no fixed relative humidity by temperature. There is an absolute maximum, determined by temperature and pressure. At 25 degrees C, air can hold about 23.04 grams of water per cubic meter (g/m3) At 28 degrees C, air can hold about 27.4 grams of water per cubic meter (g/m3). This is about 19.3% more water vapor. *This is based on standard atmospheric pressure. Denser air hold more, thinner air holds less.
For air it will be 21.1 degrees Celcius
If your question is "How cold was it", then the water temperature was 28 degrees Fahrenheit, which is roughly -2 Celsius. The air temperature was roughly the same.
Well, if you have 21 degrees air temperature, it's ok if the water you'll swim in is warmer, but if the water is cooler then it won't feel very comfortable. If you mean 21 degrees water temperature, it's ok to swim if the temperature of the air is warm (otherwise you'll feel cold when you come out). A heated pool's temperature is around 30 degrees, so 21 is not the same, but it's perfectly ok once you go in the water.
it depends on temperature of the air and where the water is coming from.
The average water temperature is 82.774839 degrees F when air temperature is in the high 80's.The average water temperature is 89.995841 degrees F when air temperature is in thelow 90's.The average water temperature is 75.448375 degrees F when air temperature is in the high 70'sSO basically when the air is hot the water is hot and when the agod wikipedia could give a better answer than you lot and by the way thats saying something
20 degrees Celsius is a temperature or a temperature range on the Celsius scale, where 0 is the freezing point of water and 100 is the boiling point of water. If the air temperature is 20 degrees Celsius, the weather is cool but not cold. If a pot of water is raised in temperature by 20 degrees Celsius it is heated by a set amount. 20 degrees Celsius is the same as 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
11 degrees.
That depends on the temperature of the water and the alternate medium, air I suppose. If the water is 33 degrees F and the air is 600 deg. F it would last longer in the water. At 212 deg F water and 33 deg air it would last longer in the air. If both are at the same temperature it will melt faster in water.
The future temperature of the water depends upon the surrounding air's temperature. So if the air around the test tube is colder than 20 degrees, then the water will get colder. If the air temperature is warmer than 20 degrees then the water will get warmer.
their temperature will be 100 degrees
Either will shock your plant and might kill it. Better to use water that is the same temperature as the air temp. of the room. If you fill a jug with medium-temperature water (70 degrees F. or 20 degrees C., more or less) from the tap and let it sit for a couple of hours, it will be room temperature.
The answer depends on the amount of water vapour in the air.
100 degrees either way