At -50 deg C, it is a solid.
Solid.
Water freezes solid at 0 degrees Celsius, so it will still be solid at -24 degrees Celsius.
At sea level (1 atmosphere), water is a liquid at 25 degrees Celsius. The freezing point of water at sea level is zero degrees Celsius, and the boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius.
Of water, 212 and 32 degrees, respectively.
It depends on the temperature scale you're using. In Fahrenheit, water returns from gas to liquid at 32 degrees. In Celsius, it returns at 0 degrees. And, in Kelvin, it returns to liquid at 273 degrees.
Trick question: At minus 5 degrees Celsius, water is a solid. A rock would sit on top of it.
Minus six degrees Fahrenheit
If fifty grams of water cooled from 50 degrees to 10 degrees, and the specific heat of water is 4.2, 135 kJ of heat was released.
The state of water at -25 C is solid. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius.
There are three states of water. The first state is water. If you freeze water to the freezing point which is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit, it gives you ice, which is the second state of water. The last state of water is steam/gas which is formed when you heat water to the boiling point which is 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Solid
No. The temp on Pluto is well below minus 400 degrees F.
Liquid Well, actually it would depend upon the ambient pressure, too. At very low pressures, water at 50 degrees C may well be boiling. Try cooking a pot of soup atop a high mountain and you will see what I mean.
The temperature of Water at 103 degrees can be solid or liquids. Or maybe both of them
Liquid
0 degrees centigrade for water to freeze 100 degrees centigrade for water to boil
Frozen because water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit