no..
Syrups are more viscous so require higher temprature to boil
Because steam is hotter than boiling water.
Because it stick's to your skin, and keep's burning instead of burning you once and running off. It also has a higher melting point ( I think it is 140 degree's, but I am not sure on the exact temp.! )
No se?
Because that's the boiling point.
10000 times hotter! That is your answer.
Steam. Liquids turn to solids when they reach a temperature, so steam has to be hotter than boiling water.
Black car gets hotter than the silver car?
More than likely because boiling is much hotter than just warm and when things are hot then dissolve whats around them and since boiling is hotter than warm it dissolves faster. That's just my theory.
Technically speaking steam has a higher temperature, but boiling water often has more heat energy per volume. Steam starts at 100degrees C, which is the absolute maximum temperature of boiling water, but steam can be much much hotter, all the way up to thousands of degrees. However, steam as a gas is much less dense than water, and so steam at 100C will injure a person much less than water at 100C.
Water boils at a hotter temperature than it freezes in any scale.
For a given substance, yes, it's gaseous form is hotter than its liquid form. However, you cannot say that a gas, of any substance, is generally hotter than a liquid of some other substance. Different substances have different boiling points. The boiling point for Nitrogen, for example, is well below the boiling point of water, and even below the freezing point of water. So you cannot say that Nitrogen gas is hotter than liquid water.
It's hotter than boiling water. The boiling point of water is 374.15 Kelvin. So with this temperature you could melt Zinc, Selenium, Potassium, Phosphorus and Cadmium.