273.15K is the melting point of water in kelvin
That's not correct; water boils at 100 degrees Celsius, to go from C to K, you add 273 to the Celsius temperature...
100+273 = 373 degrees K
Water doesn't have a melting point; it has a freezing point and a boiling point. If you want to know the melting point of ice (which is the freezing point of water), in Kelvin, then the answer is 273.15.
Water does not have a melting point; it has a freezing point and a boiling point. If you are asking what the melting point of freshwater ice is in the Kelvin scale, it is the same as the freezing point of water, which is 273.15 degrees K. A Kelvin degree is the same temperature difference as a Celsius degree, which is 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit, but the scales start in different places. The Kelvin scale was designed to always be a positive number, so its zero point on the scale is absolute zero. Since heat is about molecular motion, absolute zero is the point at which all molecular motion has ceased, and the only motion left is quantum jitters, which can never be stopped.
273.15 K
(since the freezing point of water is 0OC, and to convert celcius to kelvin you add 273.15, and 0+273.15 =273.15)
I'm pretty sure Kelvin is just Celsius+273... so it would be 273 degrees kelvin for freezing point, and 373 for boiling point... Im assuming by melting point of water you mean freezing point
0o Celsius + 273.15
= 273.15 Kelvin
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273.15 kelvin because 1 ATM is reffering to the normal atmospheric pressure so it is the normal freezing point converted to kelvin Rob
273 degrees kelvin
The freezing point of water is 0°C, 32°F or 273.15 Kelvin. The boiling point of water is 100°C, 212°F or 373.15 Kelvin. Therefore the difference is 100°C, 180°F or 100 Kelvin.
ordinary water 0Cheavy water 4C
It raises the boiling point and the freezing point of water than normal.
Kelvin = Celsius + 273.15 therefore (assuming you are referring to the freezing point of water, 0C) freezing point = 273.15K
273.15 kelvin because 1 ATM is reffering to the normal atmospheric pressure so it is the normal freezing point converted to kelvin Rob
Freezing point: 273.15 K Melting point: 373 K
Freezing point: 273.15 K Melting point: 373 K
273 degrees kelvin
The freezing point of water is 0°C, 32°F or 273.15 Kelvin. The boiling point of water is 100°C, 212°F or 373.15 Kelvin. Therefore the difference is 100°C, 180°F or 100 Kelvin.
Yes.. Tecnaclly the freezing point of water is 31.9999999999999....degrees F And the melting point of water is 32 degrees F
You stick a thermometer graded in Kelvin into a mixture of ice and water. It should read something close to 273.15
273.15 and 373.15 K respectively.
Only the Kelvin scale. The Celsius scale, for example is based on the thermal properties of water, as is the Reaumur scale. The Fahrenheit scale is based on the freezing point of brine, the freezing point of water and, possibly, the normal body temperature.
zero
It means the temperature is 12 degrees Celsius (or 12o Centigrade, or 12 Kelvin) below the freezing point of pure water at normal pressure.