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it depends what the liquid is. water liquid turns into vapour at 100c
5x2260, so 11,300 J or 11.3 KJ
When a substance is boiling, a part af the substance becomes vapor, the vapor is warmer than 100°C but not the liquid part.
The molecules slow down and begin to change back to the liquid state.
Anything can be solid, liquid or gas, but the easiest example is probably water. Water freezes/melts at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius) and boils/condenses at 212 F (100C) and is liquid at normal room temperature.
it depends what the liquid is. water liquid turns into vapour at 100c
It is different for every liquid. For water it is 100C
100C or 212F. It is the boiling point of water, where water turns from a liquid into a gas.
all elements can exist as liquids, you just need to find the right temperature. Water is a liquid between 0-100C.
Your skin would be more damaged by the gaseous water because the particles are moving faster.
Water is a gas at +100C and a solid at -0. Therefor water is a liquid at 0-100C.
boiling point, boiling point of water is 100C
Each gas condenses at a different temp. as for water vapor it condenses at 212F or 100C
5x2260, so 11,300 J or 11.3 KJ
Water takes the state of liquid (water) between 0 and 100 degrees celsius.
When a substance is boiling, a part af the substance becomes vapor, the vapor is warmer than 100°C but not the liquid part.
The molecules slow down and begin to change back to the liquid state.