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the temperature at the inner core of the earth is at the high is about 7,000 degrees Celsius.(not more!)According to my calculations (and my science book) the center of the earth is about 5000 Celsius The temperature of the center of the earth is around 12,600 degrees Fahrenheit.The temperature at the centre of the earth is approximately 7,000 degrees celsius :)about 4500 degrees Celsius
Boiling Points for Water at Standard Pressure:100 degrees C (Celsius or Centigrade)373.15 K (Kelvin)212 degrees F (Fahrenheit)At standard pressure (the pressure of the earth's atmosphere at sea level), water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.(The same temperature as 212 degrees Fahrenheit and 373.15 Kelvin.)At lower atmospheric pressure (e.g. at higher altitudes), water will boil at a lower temperature.If under higher pressure (e.g. inside a pressure cooker), it will take higher temperature than 100 degrees Celsius to make water boil.
Mars. The temperature there can vary between 20 degrees Celsius and -140 degrees Celsius.
It is 5,000 degrees Celsius in Earth's inner core.
Well the lowest temperature that its possible to get to is -273 degrees Celsius. That's the farthest I know so it cant be below there. Improvement: It always is hot on Venus. The average temperature is about 480 degrees Celsius and it doesn't drop much even at night.
I am Berylium, Be, Atomic number 4 and I have a boiling point of 2970 degrees celsius.
Beryllium
Melting Point: 1287.0 °C Boiling Point: 2469.0 °C
Solid as their lowest boiling point is 1110 degrees-Celsius and (highest) melting point is 714 degrees-Celsius. This means that at less that 714 degrees-Celsius, which room temperature falls under, it is SOLID. :D Hope that helped.
Solid as their lowest boiling point is 1110 degrees-Celsius and (highest) melting point is 714 degrees-Celsius. This means that at less that 714 degrees-Celsius, which room temperature falls under, it is SOLID. :D Hope that helped.
Beryllium (Be)
i don't know but could it be lava? I'm only in year nine so I'm practically guessing and the only hot thing i could now over is lava... ^^ lava is not an element, but my best guess would be Beryllium as it has a boiling point of 2,970 degrees celcius and it is an alkaline earth metal.
Denver is about 1 mile above sea level. The boiling point of water depresses about 0.3 degrees Celsius for every 76 meters of elevation. At 1 mile, the boiling point is about 95 degrees Celsius.
Beryllium
---- ---- No because the sun would just evaporate the water in all the oceans, lakes, ponds, rivers, seas, and streams. After that, it would never snow or rain. The Earth would be a very dry place. So, in the end, the Water cycle would NOT exist on Earth if the boiling temperature was 200 degrees celsius. ---- ----
The boiling point of oxygen is -183 degrees Celsius. Because it is this low, oxygen will always be a gas at room temperature.
Generally this question is asked in reference to water (which is ~100 degrees Celsius) It should be pointed out that the fact that water boils at 100 degrees Celsius and freezes at 0 degrees Celsius at one atmosphere pressure (760 mm Hg) is not a fluke. It was purposely scaled to to water. In general the boiling point is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of a liquid equals the external pressure acting on the liquid. On Earth in the open air the boiling point of a liquid depends on atmospheric pressure. As a consequence the boiling point becomes lower as the external pressure is reduced - as when you go to the peak of a mountain.