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When climbing a mountain, you will reach colder temperatures.
Cold water can dissolve less salt than can hot water. Therefore, you would reach the saturation point faster with cold water.
Temperature is one of the things that can change the solubility of a solute in a solvent. When you add salt to water at room temperature, you can just add so much of salt then you reach a saturation point. Increasing the temperature increases the collisions between the solute and solvent particles thereby dissolving more solute.
if you were to constantly increase the temperature of a solid you would eventually reach the melting point for that particular substance, at which time the solid would melt to a liquid. if you were to keep heating the substance, at some point the liquid would reach its boiling point and would evaporate to a gas.
The temperature to which air must be cooled to reach saturation is called the dew point.
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It is the Dew point.
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Temperature and diffusion rates are usually linearly proportional. As temperature increases diffusion rate also increases and vice versa. In most cases, diffusion rate will reach 0 after saturation or the maximum possible temperature.
when condensation and evaporation equal
When climbing a mountain, you will reach colder temperatures.
Wet bulb temperature is the temperature that you get when you put a wet sock over a standard thermometer and blow air over it. It's a customary approximation for the adiabatic saturation temperature, the temperature that the air would reach if you evaporated water into it until it was saturated without exchanging heat with the surroundings.The wet-bulb temperature is the temperature a parcel of air would have if it were cooled to saturation (100% relative humidity) by the evaporation of water into it, with the latent heat being supplied by the parcel.
The surface temperature of the sun is about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. However, there is an increase in temperature from the surface to the sun's core, where the temperature can reach nearly 27,000,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Cold water can dissolve less salt than can hot water. Therefore, you would reach the saturation point faster with cold water.
This is known as the solubility of the solute in the solvent. When you reach the maximum it is know as the saturation concentration. Adding any more solute will not dissolve in the solvent.
Saturation point is a pint when no more solute can be dissolved in a solvent. The saturation point is directly related to the temperature. Increase in temperature results in increasing kinectic energy of molecules and hence can dissolve further. For example dissolve salt in cup of water, the salt with dissolve till certain point, stirring can can take you one step further but if you continue pouring salt in the same cup which has definite volume of water, you will reach to a point where no more salt will be dissolved. This point is the saturation point. Now put this cup on stove and you will see that supplying thermal energy (heat energy in transit), will dissolve the salt further.