100 degrees c
There is not a constant difference. At the freezing point of water, 0 deg Celsius = 32 deg Fahrenheit - a difference of 32. At the boiling point of water = 100 deg C = 212 deg F, the difference is 180.
It is 686 deg C.
They are regions (bubbles) of gaseous water (water vapor) that have been heated from liquid to gaseous state (having reached the boiling point at 100 deg Celsius).
The boiling point of barium is 1,897°C
increases
Melting point of gold, 1064 deg C; boiling point, 2856 deg C.
On the Celsius scale, pure water, at normal atmospheric pressure, freezes at 0 deg C and boils at 100 deg C.
Melting: 0 degrees celsius Boiling: 100 degrees celsius
The boiling point of oxygen at atmospheric pressure (1 atm) is -183 degrees Celsius.
No. Water boils at 100 deg C. Gold has quite a ways to go even to melt from there.
Water freezes at zero degrees celsius or 32 fahrenheit.
The Celsius or centigrade scale runs from -273 deg C to you name it. 0 deg C is the freezing point of pure water 100 deg C is the boiling point of water. 15,000,000 deg C is the core temperature of the Sun The Kelvin scale (K) uses the same units. -273 deg C = 0 deg K. 0 deg K is also known as absolute zero, the point at which no further heat energy can be extracted from a system