What I mean by that is... If you wash your hair with cold water, have you a better chance of rinsing your hair with less limescale than if you used hot water?
Heat kills germs. Why would it be any dirtier?
Hot water tends to contain more impurities. It is more likely to dissolve metals and minerals and carry them through the piping.
Yes. When water is heated, the H2O molecules tend to disperse because they vibrate more and this causes more pressure.
The temperature of the water does not change the mineral content.
Yes.
It depends on how you define "pressure." In general, pressure is the amount of force applied to a particular area. If you are talking about the pressure the water (or any liquid) applies to its container, hot water is indeed "stronger." This is because the molecules of hotter substances move more rapidly, and in all directions - including "outside." (In fact, this rapid movement of molecules is precisely what temperature is.)On the other hand, if "inner" pressure is what concerns you, cold water (orcold anything) is stronger, for the converse reason - the molecules are moving more slowly and staying more "together." Hence, cold weather is of a higher pressure than hot.This phenomenon is naturally related to the two other phases of water - if the water becomes cold enough, its molecules more or less stop moving altogether and it freezes into ice (and no situation is of greater pressure than getting frozen!) whereas if it moves rapidly enough, the molecules' bonds will break apart more or less altogether, and it will evaporate into steam (which has enough pressure to power a locomotive piston!).
hot water contains more energy than cold water. cold water causes the water molegules to vibrate more.
If you have the same volume of both then there are in cold water more molecules.
because when you get out of the baths of hot water its a bigger change in temp rather than after you get out of one with a cold water than the temp in te house will be warmer than ur bath
Yes, because the higher the temperature, the faster and more spread out the molecules, therefore making hot water less dense than cold water.
More than likely it is restiction in your water heater.
Colder water can hold more oxygen than warmer water.
cold ocean waer has more dense than warm water.
yes
cold ocean water is more dense than warm water
Cold water is more dense.
air molecules in cold air exert more pressure because they are closer together and collide more often
It depends on how you define "pressure." In general, pressure is the amount of force applied to a particular area. If you are talking about the pressure the water (or any liquid) applies to its container, hot water is indeed "stronger." This is because the molecules of hotter substances move more rapidly, and in all directions - including "outside." (In fact, this rapid movement of molecules is precisely what temperature is.)On the other hand, if "inner" pressure is what concerns you, cold water (orcold anything) is stronger, for the converse reason - the molecules are moving more slowly and staying more "together." Hence, cold weather is of a higher pressure than hot.This phenomenon is naturally related to the two other phases of water - if the water becomes cold enough, its molecules more or less stop moving altogether and it freezes into ice (and no situation is of greater pressure than getting frozen!) whereas if it moves rapidly enough, the molecules' bonds will break apart more or less altogether, and it will evaporate into steam (which has enough pressure to power a locomotive piston!).
mercury exerts more pressure than water bcause mercury is a metal and water is a non metal obviously mercury weighs more than water
Water is more dense than air is.
Depends where you are testing it. Possibly just a plugged aerator, or a broken seal.
My guess is that the hot water heater is installed downstream from a pressure reducer to limit the maximum water pressure that the water heater is exposed to.