Most geysers erupt hot water, however there are a few cold water geysers in the world. The reason why they 'erupt' is due to pressure, it has nothing to do with water temperature.
There is no "one" specific answer to this as it depends if it comes from an "on demand geyser", "gravity fed geyser" or "high pressure geyser" and the distance between the geyser and the tap
A hot spring that naturally shoots steam and boiling water is called a geyser.
First of all, there are two principles:1.hot water is less dense and rises up2.cold water is more dense and goes down.so when water becomes hot, it rises up and replaces the cold water which comes down. That is why cold water enters from the bottom.
Yes, Old Faithful can be dangerous. The VERY hot water that comes out of the geyser, and can possibly burn you alive. The workers there keep everyone a safe distance away from the geyser.
Geyser is a noun describing a hot spring that spouts water and steam. Example sentence: The main attractions to him at Yellowstone were the geysers. The water from the geyser was injuriously hot.
If by 'geyser' you mean an old water heater, it should be around 125 f.
Well, a glacier is frozen and a geyser has steam and boiling hot water coming from it. A glacier stays still but, u know, sometimes breaks, and a geyser erupts. Geysers are extremly rare and glaciers r not so rare. Glaciers are located in cold areas and geysers can be located in almost any area no matter what the climate is.
It's called a geyser.
Smokin' hot baby. Smokin' hot celsius.
cold air because when the temperature drops hot air rises and cold air comes to ground level,cold water and hot water have the same density.
An erupting hot spring is a geyser.
The correct spelling is "geyser." A geyser is a hot spring that intermittently sends up a column of water and steam into the air.