No. You simply get water of an intermediate temperature. Tornadoes are not simply a product of "hot meeting cold." The are a wide variety of factors.
no... 139 Celsius is above the boiling point of water.
Think of a pot of boiling water. The burner makes the heat, the heat rises, and the cold water replaces it, then the cold water gets hotter and rises. It's a cycle
Think of a pot of boiling water. The burner makes the heat, the heat rises, and the cold water replaces it, then the cold water gets hotter and rises. It's a cycle
212 oF is the boiling point of water. 212 oF = 100 oC
cold and warm fronts can cause a tornado
Sodium chloride is also soluble in boiling water.
They are the same. When cold water heats up and bubbles that means it is boiling.
It freeze in cold and disolve in boilng
cold water heating up to its boiling point a physical change or a chemical change
It requires water and oxygen. Cold, lukewarm, or boiling water will do it. Boiling can introduce some other types of errosion/corrosion, also.
Potassium Manganate (VII) also called potassium permanganate, dissolves very quickly in hot water and much slower in cold water.
Cold water will not disinfect. Water must be boiling for it to be able to disinfect anything. It is not recommended to pour boiling water on the skin, though. If you're looking to disinfect a wound, try alcohol.
Only in boiling water.
by putting it in a bowl of cold water over the top of boiling water this stabalises the cheese whilst boiling
a bath full of cold water
when hot water and cold water are mixed together then the energy is transfered from hotwater to cold water
Boiling water or super cold water can damage or kill some plants, but, aside from that, I have never of any water temperature being better or worse for plant growth.