Want this question answered?
I was unable to find any information on a "IGEma". If this is a type of a boiling water kettle, you will see the orange indicator light up on the side of the pot when water reaches boiling.
Iceberg.Heat is anything above absolute zero (-273 degrees C).It is the total energy of molecular motion in a substance while temperature is a measure of the average energy of molecular motion in a substance. Heat energy depends on the speed of the particles, the number of particles (the size or mass), and the type of particles in an object. Temperature does not depend on the size or type of object. For example, the temperature of a small cup of water might be the same as the temperature of a large tub of water, but the tub of water has more heat because it has more water and thus more total thermal energy.The iceberg is a huge object with a lot of mass or volume than a pot of water.Therefore due to the massive size of the iceberg the amount of heat (even though it is not as 'hot' as the boiling water) is greater.
Pure water does not increase - or in any other way affect - the boiling teperature of water becasue the latter is normally taken to be that for pure water!The question does not make sense. What type of water is it whose boiling temperature is meant to be increased by pure water? Impure water?In any case, pure water does not increase the boiling point of water but lowers it.
No, steam is water as a gas.
Endothermic reactions increase their enthalpy by absorbing heat
convection
The type of energy which is used to boil water is commonly heat energy. This will result to a changes from the liquid state to gaseous in form of water vapor,.
This type of heat transfer is called conduction. The transfer is from the warm hand to cool water.
Copper transfers the greatest percentage of heat to the contents of the pot (water). As for the shape of the pot ..... lower and about 1" wider on all sides than the heat source.as wide as the heat source.
Crystallization
I was unable to find any information on a "IGEma". If this is a type of a boiling water kettle, you will see the orange indicator light up on the side of the pot when water reaches boiling.
Yes! Water is a heat sink.
distilled water
Iceberg.Heat is anything above absolute zero (-273 degrees C).It is the total energy of molecular motion in a substance while temperature is a measure of the average energy of molecular motion in a substance. Heat energy depends on the speed of the particles, the number of particles (the size or mass), and the type of particles in an object. Temperature does not depend on the size or type of object. For example, the temperature of a small cup of water might be the same as the temperature of a large tub of water, but the tub of water has more heat because it has more water and thus more total thermal energy.The iceberg is a huge object with a lot of mass or volume than a pot of water.Therefore due to the massive size of the iceberg the amount of heat (even though it is not as 'hot' as the boiling water) is greater.
Water Vapor
Pure water does not increase - or in any other way affect - the boiling teperature of water becasue the latter is normally taken to be that for pure water!The question does not make sense. What type of water is it whose boiling temperature is meant to be increased by pure water? Impure water?In any case, pure water does not increase the boiling point of water but lowers it.
thermometer