Boiling water is endothermic as the water needs to take in energy from its surrounding in order to boil.
It is endothermic as the water mus gain energy to go from a liquid to a gas.
Both are endothermic.
Yes boiling water is endothermic because you are supplying the energy to the water molecules. (Or in most instances the kettle is supplying the energy to the water, still endothermic), the water doesn't just spontaneously boil at 25C and release heat energy, it takes you putting in massive energy to get it to boil.
For boiling energy is needed, so it's endothermic.
(An endothermic process is one that absorbs heat.)"An endothermic reaction just took place between the water and the chemical.""Boiling water is an endothermic process that adds energy to the water molecules."
Boiling is an endothermic process.
Boiling and melting are endothermic. Freezing is exothermic.
For example melting or boiling.
No, boiling is endothermic as in order to boil a liquid must gain energy from its surroundings.
Yes, the boiling of liquid nitrogen is an endothermic process because it requires energy to break the intermolecular forces holding the nitrogen molecules together in the liquid state. This energy is absorbed from the surroundings, making the process endothermic.
Endothermic, the soup is taking in heat to boil.
yes it is a endothermic reaction