No, no. Of course not.
The amount of heat Q required to increase the temperature of a body of mass m having specific heat capacity c through DO degrees celsius is given by:
Q = mcDO
Thus, the one with the higher specific heat capacity will require more heat energy.
The temperature at which the substance boils is the temperature at which it boils. It's not the temperature at which any certain amount of it boils.
This is the Gay-Lussac law: at constant volume of a gas the temperature increase when the pressure increase.
One way is to grind up solid, or increase the temperature. Also, you can stir the solution, and then, there are enzymes.
increase
Any of the following: increasing the amount of gas; increasing the temperature; reducing the volume.
Increasing the temperature would shift the equilibrium to the right and increase the amount of product.
Increasing the temperature would shift the equilibrium to the right and increase the amount of product.
- the speed of reaction increase with increasing temperature - the actual efficiency increase with increasing temperature
The amount of heat required to increase the temperature of the substance to 1 degree greater than that of the initial temperature of the body!
Ozone is a greenhouse gas. Increase in amount of ozone will increase the temperature of the atmosphere.
hydrogen!!! Hydrogen14.30 Jg-1K-1
When there is an increase in an object or medium's temperature, its particles have increase kinetic energy. Temperature is the measure of the average amount of kinetic energy within an object or medium.
temperature
decreasing the volume available for the gas or increasing its temperature
Assuming that pressure and the amount of matter are constant (meaning they do not change), volume will increase as temperature increases.
The temperature at which the substance boils is the temperature at which it boils. It's not the temperature at which any certain amount of it boils.
Increase temperature. any of the following:- 1) increase the temperature of the Solvent (what you are trying to dissolve in) 2) increase the surface area of the Solute (what you are dissolving) 3) increase the agitation (stirring) and the amount of the solvent.