at 69 digress
It willalways be the temperature of it's surroundings unless it's surroundings have quickly changed (i.e. you take a glass of water out of the fridge and put it on the table). The is no default temperature water forms at.
pure water freezes at 0 degrees or 32 degrees f
For Fahrenheit it's 32 degrees. For Celsius, it's 0 degrees.
at 69 digress
100 Celsius.
On the Celsius scale, pure water, at normal atmospheric pressure, freezes at 0 deg C and boils at 100 deg C.
The answer depends primarily on the scale that you are using. On the Celsius (or Centigrade) scale, under normal atmospheric pressure, pure water boils at 100 deg.
zero
100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit
It only boils at 100 degrees Celsius because Anders Celsius chose the boiling point of water to be a reference point on his new metric scale. The freezing point of water was his other reference point.
On the Celsius scale, pure water, at normal atmospheric pressure, freezes at 0 deg C and boils at 100 deg C.
At normal pressure, pure water boils at 100 deg C and freezes at 0 deg C.
The answer depends primarily on the scale that you are using. On the Celsius (or Centigrade) scale, under normal atmospheric pressure, pure water boils at 100 deg.
Pure water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
zero
No. Pure water boils at 100 degrees Celsius or less.
water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius. water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
At an altitude of 1000 metres, pure water will boil at approx 96.5 deg C
its celsius
Yes, it can. Under normal temperature and pressure, pure water does.
The water boiling point in Celsius is 100 °C.
100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit