when water boils it evaporates in to air
"Turning to vapor" is a description of boiling. At normal conditions, water boils at 212oF.
100 at standard presure
When water boils, bubbles form due to the release of water vapor from the liquid. These bubbles contain water vapor, not air. The water itself does not disappear; it is transformed into water vapor, which you see as bubbles.
Water boils at 100C (or 212F) at sea level.
True. When water boils, the intermolecular hydrogen bonds between water molecules are broken, allowing them to escape as vapor.
it evaporates into the air
saltwater boils the fastest
Water boils at 373.15 Kelvin.
Water boils at 373.15K.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure.
when water boils it simply evapourates and broke steamy particles
Yes. It's the condensation principle.
The water that boils fasteris fresh water because salthas an effect on water.
"Turning to vapor" is a description of boiling. At normal conditions, water boils at 212oF.
Steam condences into water, water freezes in to ice, ice melts into water, water boils to steam
100 at standard presure
On the Kelvin scale, water boils at 373.15 K.