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No. Heating water increases the frequency of collisions of molecules.
No.
Boiling water can be either thermal energy or kinetic energy dependent upon how it's used. If it is used to heat up another object (thereby transferring energy in that manner) it is thermal; if the water vapor from the boiled water is used to say, run a turbine, it would be kinetic in that sense. Chances are, for most cases involving boiling water, or more specifically the water vapor produced by it, the energy associated with that will be kinetic.
It will raise the boiling point. This why, for example, car radiators have a pressure cap. This causes a rise in the boiling point of the water and it is less likely to boil.
Boiling water is physical change.
Convection occurs when heat is transferred into an object through motion or movement; an example would be boiling water.
Convection occurs when heat is transferred into an object through motion or movement; an example would be boiling water.
It refers to a boil. When water is boiling, a rolling boil is when you are stirring the water and it is still boiling.
conduction
No. Heating water increases the frequency of collisions of molecules.
water boiling in a pot
No.
Short answer: Pressure. Long answer: Pressure changes the boiling point of a substance. The higher the pressure, the higher the boiling point, and vice versa. For example, boiling water in the mountains is easier than boiling water at sea level. Note that boiling water is not necessarily hot. You can boil water at room temperature if the pressure is low enough (For example, using a vacuum generator)
One example of motion is a ball rolling down a hill. During such motion, the ball's kinetic energy is increasing and its potential energy is decreasing.
Bubbly (bubbling), roiling, simmering.The movement is usually a rolling boil.
Boiling water can be either thermal energy or kinetic energy dependent upon how it's used. If it is used to heat up another object (thereby transferring energy in that manner) it is thermal; if the water vapor from the boiled water is used to say, run a turbine, it would be kinetic in that sense. Chances are, for most cases involving boiling water, or more specifically the water vapor produced by it, the energy associated with that will be kinetic.
An example is the ascension of water in plant stems.