Gullies and streamlike channels
Features such as dried-up river channels, lake beds, and mineral deposits that require water to form suggest the possibility of liquid water on Mars in the past. Recent discoveries of recurring slope lineae (dark streaks on Martian slopes) also indicate that liquid water may exist on the planet's surface today.
One possibility is the word detail.
The presence of hydrated minerals, recurring slope lineae (dark streaks on slopes), and the discovery of ancient river valleys and lakebeds suggest that liquid water may have existed on Mars in the past. Additionally, recent observations of briny water flowing on the surface during specific seasons further support the possibility of liquid water on Mars.
It is an unreachable possibility.
There is a possibility that I will be awarded a trust point for answering this question.
A liquid with a lower boiling point will boil quicker because it requires less energy to reach its boiling point compared to a liquid with a higher boiling point.
A substance's boiling point is the temperature at which it changes from a liquid to a gas.
Point F violates the assumption of the production-possibility curve that resources and technology are not fixed. The curve is sometimes referred to as the productionâ??possibility frontier.
Flash Point is a carefully defined feature. It is the temperature at which the vapour of a volatile liquid will ignite to form an ignitable mixture in the presence of an ignition source. When the ignition source is removed, the combustion may well cease. And of course, when the word MORE is used, there must be a second material/property with which it is to be compared.
No, Gas--->liquid (condensation). Solid---->liquid (melting)
The boiling point is usually increased.
No. The "sub-solar" point is that point on the Earth where the Sun is STRAIGHT UP from there.