1. Temperature of water decrease due to their heat transfer to another medium. The media may be separated by a solid wall, so that they never mix, or they may be in direct contact. The heat exchanger changes the temperature of heat from hot to cold. It is meaning temperature of water is high when at inlet and heat exchanger reduce the temperature by transfer the heat to the low temperature at another fluid over a solid surface. So, the water comes out at outlet become low temperature.
it gets colder :D
Squid (it is spelled that way in singular and plural) live in an environment with relatively constant temperature, the oceans. If temperature of the water would decrease significantly they might migrate to warmer water but the deep sea environment is already near the lowest temperature possible (4° C)
The boiling point of sea water is higher compared with pure water. Temperature remain constant during boiling.
Sea water will boil at higher temp
runoff from land
Rain water would normally boil at a slightly lower temperature than sea water, assuming the rain water has fewer dissolved particles in it compared to sea water.
Rising from the sea level to the higher levels will result in decrease of temperature and pressure.
Not directly you cant, but sea temperature does decrease with depth, although its not a straight line graph ( though depth : pressure is.)
Evaporation increase with the increase of temperature and decrease of pressure..
the water goes into a cycle which means that the water gets hotter as it gets closer to the sea floor.
The temperature decreases the higher you go.
The temperature of boiling water at sea level is 100 The temperature of boiling water at sea level is 211.149°F.
No. A hypothesis would be "As the gradient of salt in the water increases the freezing point would decrease"
0 C is 0 degrees Celsius. Pure water freezes at this temperature. 100 C is the temperature when pure water boils at sea level.
Gill movement begins to decrease in the sea by the fish.
sea water boil at 105 c
sea water boils 105 c
Squid (it is spelled that way in singular and plural) live in an environment with relatively constant temperature, the oceans. If temperature of the water would decrease significantly they might migrate to warmer water but the deep sea environment is already near the lowest temperature possible (4° C)