PH Bigg (Br J Appl Physics, 1967) says:
18C: 0.99859
20C: 0.99820
So by interpolation:
19.5C: 0.99830
According to Wolfram|Alfa (see link below), water has a density of 997.2 g/L at 24.5 oC.
0.9978858 g/mL @21.5C
0.9981026 g/mL @20.5C
0.9938621 g/mL @35.5C
62-65 degrees c
205 g = about 0.4519 pounds.
The solubility of glucose in water at 25 oC is only 909 g/L.
http://www.umich.edu/~chem216/216%20S11-Expt%205.pdf
It will have about 150-160 hp unless it is supercharged. It could possibly be 205 hp
-214 degrees Celsius to -205 degrees Celsius.
205 degrees Celsius = 401 degrees FahrenheitUse this formula to convert degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC) to degrees Fahrenheit (ºF): (ºC x 1.8) + 32 =ºF
at the highest temp. it is -205 degrees Celsius.
205 °C is equal to 401 °F The conversion formula is Fahrenheit temperature = (9/5 x Celsius temperature)+ 32
One of the physical properties of Benzanilide is that its melting point is 163 Degrees Celsius. Its boiling point is 117 Degrees Celsius. Benzanilide is in the form of white crystals that are like needles.
You, just now. The water boiling at 212 is Fahrenheit (sort of... he actually didn't originally use the boiling point of water as a reference mark, and it got adjusted later to make it exactly 180 degrees above the freezing point; on his original scale water boiled at about 205 degrees). However, on that scale water freezes at 32 degrees (both now and on the original scale). Water freezing at zero degrees is Celsius. However, on that scale water boils at 100 degrees. (Again... sort of. Celsius originally had it running backward, so that water boiled at 0 degrees and froze at 100 degrees; fortunately, sanity later prevailed so that colder temperatures got lower numbers instead of higher ones.)
The boiling point of water is 100°C, 212°F or 373.15 Kelvin under standard conditions at sea level (at one atmosphere of pressure).The boiling point of water and any other substance depends on the atmospheric pressure, which changes with elevation. At higher altitudes, the pressure is lower, and so water boils at a lower temperature. If the barometric pressure is not at the standard value, the boiling point will be different. For example, water boils at 72 degrees Celsius on Mount Everest.Under a partial vacuum water boils at room temperature. In space (a full vacuum) water goes directly from solid ice to gas without even melting or boiling, this is called sublimation.Water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit and 100 degrees Celsius.The above answer is correct, provided you are at sea level. The higher you go the lower the temprature is needed to reach boiling. Getting a bit more technical, it also depends on the purity of the water you are boiling. Best we got in height school was around 97 degrees Celsius.
205 cc is MEASURE of volume.All you need now is to find the density of the liquid /solid that takes up that volume.! if its water say its density is 1 conveniently so KNOWING THAT 1 LITRE OF WATER WEIGHS 1000Grammes = 2.2046 lbs thus 205 cc = 205 grammes.Dont ask if its dry weight that's where USA got too clever for its own good. ANON
The population density of Östmark is 205 people per square kilometer.
Degrees C = (Degrees F - 32) /1.8 Ans: 96.1 degrees C
205 grams of water is 205 ml
It ranges from about minus 214 degrees C to a high of minus 205 degrees C.