it doesnt, water has the same specific heat no matter what temperature it is at...about 4.18. Specific heat is a characteristic value of materials to resist changes in temperature (heat flow). Please rephrase the question if this is not the answer you are after
In a refrigerator, the temperature is higher than in a freezer, causing the molecules to have more energy and move faster. This increased movement leads to a faster rate of heat transfer, which helps to cool the refrigerator's contents more quickly compared to a freezer.
Mpemba effect ,water evaporates faster so it has less water so it freezes faster
beacause its solid
Yes ,the higher the temperature gradient between the hot water and room temperature, the faster it cools. However, that does not mean that hot water will freeze faster than cold water (a common urban legend). If you have water at 50°C in a room at 20°C, it will cool from 50° to 40° faster than it will cool from 40° to 30°.
The fact that hot water may freeze faster than cold is often called the Mpemba effect
Yes
Yes, usually.
Yes.
Yes. A wet animal will cool faster than a dry animal. The evaporation of the water removes heat from the body and cools it.
No It's warm water the ? was what cools faster cool water is already cool so warm water will cool faster. Plus cool water gets warm Also back in the sixties a experiment was done Hot water froze faster than cold water by a minute . ( I remember this from the Weekly Reader report. lol lol ) I also believe it's meant to suggest when the water is at room temptureroom temperature.
sand cools faster because the water aborbs and traps most heat from the suns rays
yes, hot water just cools down cold water will turn into ice which will take longer