Want this question answered?
insulators although they take a long time to heat up, it takes a longer time to cool down. that's why if you heat water in a metallic container it takes more time for the water to cool down than the coontainer.
Easiest is to take a cool bath.
It would take longer for the house to cool down because hot air can heat up the house faster
The glow stick in the cold water will not glow as bright as the glow stick in the hot water because when you cool the glow stick down, the chemical process will slow down. The glow stick in the hot water will glow brighter but for a shorter period of time.
It has more dense that water. when you take off the skin your loosing every thing that is keeping the apple up. so when the apple all the water in the apple are being weighed down,
yes, hot water just cools down cold water will turn into ice which will take longer
Because the specific heat of water is very high. In fact, water has about 1400 times more heat carrying capacity than air.
insulators although they take a long time to heat up, it takes a longer time to cool down. that's why if you heat water in a metallic container it takes more time for the water to cool down than the coontainer.
Water takes longer to heat up and to cool down then it does for land.
5 hrs to freeze solid
The amount of time it takes water to cool off would depend on the starting temperature of the water and the temperature of the environment. If it's cold in the environment, more than likely the water would take a short time to cool off.
You can walk the horse, if it is hot outside you can take it for a swim or spray with water.
Easiest is to take a cool bath.
A girl that feels hot to the touch can be cooled down a couple of ways. She can drink some cold water or she can take a cool bath or she can enter an area that has air conditioning.
Oceans make temperatures less extreme, was water tends to take a long time to heat up and cool down.
Water is evaporated, an edothermic process; also heat is lost by conduction, radiation, convection.
If the question is "how many minutes" then the answer is: it depends on how hot the water is to start with, how much the temperature has to drop before you consider it "cooled down" and what you are doing to cool it... dropping ice cubes in it? letting it sit in an open pan? sticking it in a refrigerator? overall it really can't be answered without more information.If the question is about how much "mint" it takes to cool down hot water, then you should keep in mind that the cooling sensation you get from mint isn't actually from a drop in temperature but rather the way the chemicals of the mint stimulate the nerves.