No It's warm water the ? was what cools faster cool water is already cool so warm water will cool faster. Plus cool water gets warm Also back in the sixties a experiment was done Hot water froze faster than cold water by a minute . ( I remember this from the Weekly Reader report. lol lol ) I also believe it's meant to suggest when the water is at room temptureroom temperature.
Salt dissolves faster in cold water
At nightime, the plains cool faster than bodies of water. Therefore, it is warmer at seaside. At daytime, the plains warm faster than the sea. Therefore, it is cool to stay on the beach.
Most often, yes. At night temperatures generally drop. The land cools faster than large bodies of water, resulting on cool air sinking over land while warm air rises over the water. Air from the land the moves over the water to replaces the rising air, resulting in a land breeze.
The water molecules in warm water have greater kinetic energy, making them move faster.
It is more soluble in warm water.
that all depends on the heat and cool air applied
yes because you have to know which one grows faster with warm of cooler water..!
it would be in warm
Yes, usually.
Mpemba effect ,water evaporates faster so it has less water so it freezes faster
In the beginning of what ? At the end of what ?Do you mean "Why does hot water cool faster than cool water ?" ?Because the rate at which heat passes from a warm object to a cool objectdepends on the difference in their temperatures. So, as the warm objectbecomes less warm and the difference in their temperatures becomes smaller,the rate at which heat flows between them also becomes less.
rar i am not going to anser this
Salt water does cool faster than pure water.
Basically, the rate at which the water will cool depends on the difference between the water's temperature, and the temperature of its surroundings. The higher the temperature difference, the faster it cools. There are some other factors, but that's the gist of it...
air. water takes longer to warm, but it also takes longer to cool.
The starting temperature will certainly affect the time it takes for water to freeze. By definition, the temperature will be the same for both the water that started warm as it is for the water that started cool when they both freeze. The time difference comes from going from warm (~85 degrees) to freezing (32 degrees) and from cool (~50 degrees) to freezing (32 degrees).
Warm water would help it dissolve better. Surgery things such as skittles break down in the warm water dissolve, it may take a while but it should do it eventually. Hope this helps you!