the name of the salt water fish is not given. more to the pointy is that gold fish are fresh water fish- therefore salt water fish other than anteroom's or catadromos fishes would eventualy die. These fish die because the salt water is cooler than claen water.
Also, it would depend on what the temperature of the tank was before you changed it.
There are a number of things that could happen when the temperature of a cell rises. These cells could explode for example.
A change in temperature of the core would probably have to be rather large to be noticeable, however it would affect plate tectonics. Lowering the temperature of the core would slow down activity and raising it would increase.
Because the molecules have more kinetic energy.
becasue of its energy becasue of its energy
it would change the pressure exerted by the gas in the container.
raising the temperature from 20°C to 30°C
No. A one gallon tank is not appropriate for a singular goldfish much less multiple. A ten gallon tank is the bare minimum for a singular goldfish and breeding would require a tank of twenty gallons or more. A one gallon tank cannot handle the chasing that proceeds goldfish mating nor maintain a water quality that is suitable for raising goldfish fry.
A precise answer would require knowing the ambient temperature, the temperature of the water at the start, and the conductive properties of the vessel containing the water.
The efficiency would be about the same. The only difference would be the time factor. The larger the heating element, the quicker the water would get to temperature. One other factor to consider it the insulation factor of the tank. The more insulation around the tank the longer the water will stay at temperature the less energy is used to maintain the temperature of the water in the tank. Also to consider is the incoming temperature of the cold water entering the tank. The colder the water the longer the time factor is to heat the water to a specific temperature.
a gallon-a gallon is 1000 liters
It doesn't <><><> Well, to a minor extent, it does. Warm liquids weigh less than the same volume of a cold liquid. So a gallon of ice cold gasoline would weigh slightly more than a gallon of hot gasoline. Like most things, liquids expand and contract with temperature.
Errrh, would it be a gallon of water?