---- ---- No because the sun would just evaporate the water in all the oceans, lakes, ponds, rivers, seas, and streams. After that, it would never snow or rain. The Earth would be a very dry place. So, in the end, the Water cycle would NOT exist on Earth if the boiling temperature was 200 degrees celsius. ---- ----
Water boils at a temperature of 100 degrees Celsius, or 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
The Celsius temperature scale has 100 degrees between freezing and boiling.
Which is most likely be the temperature of boiling water? 100oC is the boiling point of pure water - when water is boiling, it stays at a constant temperature until all of it is evaporated.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit. Unless, of course, you are boiling it by putting it in a vacuum without air and in that case it could be any temperature.
The Celsius temperature of 32 degrees Fahrenheit would be 0 degrees.
It would equal 0 degrees Celsius.
Zero degrees Celsius.
It would be a gas as its boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius.
100 degrees Celsius is the boiling temperature of water at standard pressure. The Fahrenheit equivalent would be 212 degrees F.
The boiling point would be 35 degrees Celsius. Use a graph comparing vapor pressure to temperature, go to the point where propanone is at 48 kpa, and see what the temperature is.
About 24 degrees Celsius.
Pure water boils at 212ºF when standard atmospheric conditions exist. Standard conditions are sea level with the baometer reading 29.92 in. Hg (14.696 psia).