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If heated to and above boiling point the pressure in the bottle would begin to rise. Depending on how much it is heated it might either stay like that, or the increased pressure might cause the bottle to burst.
When limestone is heated to above 900 degrees Celsius, it will break down into calcium oxide and carbon dioxide. This is a thermal decomposition reaction.
20 degrees above freezing in Celsius is 50 degrees Fahrenheit
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At 45 degrees north latitude, the north celestial pole appears 45 degrees above the northern horizon. At 45 degrees south latitude, the south celestial pole appears 45 degrees above the southern horizon.
if it is heated above 1200 degrees celsius than it melts
Above 15 degrees Celsius and above 10 if it's heated.
50 degrees centergrade
when heated a certain limit of atoms is disturbed because of in creased Brownian motion
There is no reason for anything to happen.
Yes, magnesium burn in air.
Absolutely not.
If heated to a high enough temperature it would be a decomposition reactions. Under normal temperatures (say under 5000 degrees F), nothing will happen. There will be no reaction. Above such high temperatures it will decompose to Mg^2+ and O^2-
136 degrees Fahrenheit. Anything above that starts to cook animal tissue.
If heated to and above boiling point the pressure in the bottle would begin to rise. Depending on how much it is heated it might either stay like that, or the increased pressure might cause the bottle to burst.
As air (unconfined), is heated its volume increases, and its density decreases. That makes it lighter (per volume) than it was. Warm air will rise above colder air, and in essence, float on top of the colder air.
When limestone is heated to above 900 degrees Celsius, it will break down into calcium oxide and carbon dioxide. This is a thermal decomposition reaction.