Liquid phase
In the liquid phase, it is 4o C. seeing how water only expands as it becomes ice, i think 0 degrees celcius is the densest
in the gas phase because during this phase there is the highest temperature bc the particles are moving the fastest
Speed of light in vacuum = ' c '-- Speed of light in Air . . 99.97% of ' c '.-- in Water . . . . . . . . 75% of ' c '.-- in Crown Glass . . . 64.9%-- in Flint Glass . . . . . 61.7%-- in Diamond . . . . . . 41.3%
seriously obviously the 75 degrees
C
Water changes from gas to liquid to a solid
(75'C)x(1g) < (75'C)x(100g) .'. The second option has more thermal energy.
The answer is that it depends upon the a. efficiency (to determine its input power). b. supply voltage. c. nature of the supply (single-phase, three-phase, d.c., etc.)
if you get a 150 out of 200 then you will a 75% which is a C average
phase rule F=C+2-p c= no. of components p=no. of phase here 2 represents temp and press are constant C=2 [water,ethanol] P=2[liq,vap] so,F=2
In the liquid phase, it is 4o C. seeing how water only expands as it becomes ice, i think 0 degrees celcius is the densest
At the melting point (Explanation) if you look at the phase diagram and look at the point where the water is 0 degrees C and 1 atm, they meet right on the line. This is the line that shows the melting point of this substance. Therefore, since the point is on the line, water at 0 degrees C and 1 atm is at the melting point.
Water at -20 degrees Celsius; heat will expand matter, so at +40 degrees Celsius, water would have less density. * * * * * That would be true if there were no phase change. Unfortunately for the above answer, water freezes at 0 deg C and that phase change is accompanied by an expansion. As a result, water at 40 deg C is denser that water (ice) at -20 deg C.
Gaseous. If that is 150 degrees C, that would be steam.
-15+c+5 = 75 c = 75+15-5 c = 85
5 tbsp of water is about 75 grams.
is a 75 out of a 100 a high C