The temperature.
A liquid will increase in temperature until it reaches the boiling point temperature. At this temperature the liquid will become a gas. Under normal circumstances, the liquid cannot get any hotter than the boiling point without becoming a gas. So the liquid remains the same temperature until it has all boiled away.
At boiling point the temperature becomes constant and supplied heat is totally utilized for evaporation.
Evaporation is partial boiling. When a liquid reaches its boiling point, no molecules of water will stay liquid and evaporation is at 100%.
No. The higher the altitude the more difficult, and fuel expensive, to boil water.
When water is boiling, the temperature remains constant, as the energy it is absorbing is being used to change the liquid water into water vapor.
When it reaches it's boiling point.
All pure liquids, such as water, H20, have constant boiling points at certain atmospheric pressures, which is helpful in determining the identity of an unknown liquid. Some liquids have constant boiling points that are not pure, such as nail polish remover, or ethyl acetate. Since it is a mixture of more than one pure liquid, it is not a pure liquid itself, but if always mixed in the same ratios, will have a constant boiling point.
The boiling point is lower at high altitude.
The boiling point temperature remains constant because liquids evaporate at this point. If the temperature drops the liquid will no longer boil. At a higher temperature the vapor becomes hotter, not the liquid.
No. Atmospheric pressure falls the higher you go. The boiling point of a liquid varies with ambient pressure. If the pressure is lower then the boiling point will be lower.
The boiling point temperature remains constant because liquids evaporate at this point. If the temperature drops the liquid will no longer boil. At a higher temperature the vapor becomes hotter, not the liquid.
Evaporation is partial boiling. When a liquid reaches its boiling point, no molecules of water will stay liquid and evaporation is at 100%.
No. The higher the altitude the more difficult, and fuel expensive, to boil water.
When it reaches its 'boiling point'.
When water is boiling, the temperature remains constant, as the energy it is absorbing is being used to change the liquid water into water vapor.
When a substance reaches its melting point it changes from solid to liquid. When a substance reaches its boiling point it changes from liquid to gas.
When it reaches its boiling point
It turns into gas
When it reaches it's boiling point.