This scale is the Réaumur scale.
The boiling point of water on the Römer temperature scale is 60 degrees. Römer scale was developed by René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur where 0 degree is freezing point and 80 degree is boiling point of water.
Depending on the Temperature scale ( Celsius) in this case, it is WATER. On the Fahrenheit SCale is is 32 oF and 212 oF On the Absoluate Scale it is 273K and 373K On the Reaumer SCale is it 0 oR and 80 oR .
The boiling point of water is 80°R in the Romar scale.
René-Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur invented the Réaumur scale in 1730, with the boiling point of water set at 80 degrees. This scale is rarely used today, with the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales being more common.
The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius
The graph of the melting point and freezing point of naphthalene would show a plateau at the melting point, as the solid naphthalene transitions into the liquid phase, and a plateau at the freezing point, as the liquid naphthalene transitions back into the solid phase. The melting point and freezing point of naphthalene are the same at approximately 80 degrees Celsius.
80 degrees Celsius
-60
depends, like abut 2 to 3 for 80 degrees and 90 degrees, and 1 c is 32 f, so it deends on the situation
It has a melting point between 31 degrees Celsius and 80 degrees Celsius, depending on the materials used.
My mistake, its should be about 111 degrees celsius.
Water has a boiling point of 367 K ( = 94oC) at 81.4 kPa (80% of Standard Sea level Pressure)