The boiling point of what?
The boiling point of water is 100°C (at standard temperature and pressure; at a higher altitude water boils at a lower temperature than at sea level).
For other substances it is different, eg:
Hydrogen boils at -252.9°C
Alcohol (ethanol) boils at 78.37°C
Mercury boils at 367.7°C
Aluminium boils at 2470°C
The boiling point of water is at 100 degrees Celsius
The temperature of the water is 100 degrees celsius.
The boiling temperature of ammonia is -33.34 degrees Celsius or -28.01 degrees Fahrenheit at standard atmospheric pressure of 1 atm.
Liquid hydrogen has a boiling point of -252.87 degrees Celsius.
Boiling water has a higher temperature than ice. Boiling water is heated to 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit), while ice is typically at 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit).
The temperature in Celsius at which water boils is 100 degrees.
Body temperature is around 37 degrees Celsius, while boiling water is 100 degrees Celsius. This means that there is a difference of 63 degrees Celsius between body temperature and boiling water.
Different substances have different boiling temperatures.
The boiling point of water is at 100 degrees Celsius
The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius
100 degrees celsius
the boiling temperature of water
There are 100 degrees Celsius between the freezing point (0°C) and boiling point (100°C) on the Celsius temperature scale.
Andrius Celsius was an astronomer who discovered the scale Celsius and said that boiling temperature is 0c and freezing 100c
The temperature of the water is 100 degrees celsius.
The boiling temperature of ammonia is -33.34 degrees Celsius or -28.01 degrees Fahrenheit at standard atmospheric pressure of 1 atm.
27 kelvin = -246.15 degrees Celsius.