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100 degrees higher.
higher then the normal boiling point of water
take water for example, if water boils at 100 degrees Celsius then it is pure. if the boiling temperature turns out to be higher or lower (most of the time it is higher) then a substance is impure. salt water boils at 102.8 degrees Celsius.
The higher the temperature, the more the naphthalene to be melt.
The temperature of boiling water stays the same. At sea level, that is 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit. At higher elevations, say on a tall mountain, the boiling point of water is less and less, the higher you go.
100 degrees higher.
The freezing point of water, as defined at a standard temperature and pressure (STP) is 0.0 degrees C and the boiling point is 100.0 degrees C. So it could be said that the difference is 100.0 degrees.
In atmospheric pressure (ie at sea level), water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
24.2 degees C is the higher temperature. 3.5 degrees C (Celsius) is 3.5 degrees above freezing. 24.2 degrees C (Celsius) is 24.2 degrees above freezing.
pretty hot it is 50 degrees Celsius higher then boiling water
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.
1. The degrees are of different sizes. 2. The lower fixed point of Celsius is the freezing point of water, that of Fahrenheit is lower. Likewise the upper fixed point of Fahrenheit is quite low, but that of Celsius is higher, at the boiling point of water.
higher then the normal boiling point of water
there is only one. ABSOLUTE ZERO. the lowest temperature witch can possible excist. further it is the same scale as Celsiuss. but with a sufferance of 273,15 degrees 0 Kelvin= -273,15 degrees Celsius.
take water for example, if water boils at 100 degrees Celsius then it is pure. if the boiling temperature turns out to be higher or lower (most of the time it is higher) then a substance is impure. salt water boils at 102.8 degrees Celsius.
The higher the temperature, the more the naphthalene to be melt.
The temperature of boiling water stays the same. At sea level, that is 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit. At higher elevations, say on a tall mountain, the boiling point of water is less and less, the higher you go.