---- ---- 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. ---- ----
Twenty degrees above the boiling point of water (100 degrees Celsius) would be 120 degrees Celsius.
95 degrees Celsius is five degrees below the boiling point of water. If you are working in Fahrenheit it is 207 degrees Fahrenheit.
Water boils at a temperature of 100 degrees Celsius, or 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
At 100 degrees Celsius usually water is boiling. 122 degrees Celsius is 251.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
Bromine is a liquid at room temperature, with a boiling point of 58.8 degrees Celsius. So at degrees Celsius higher than its boiling point, bromine would be in its gaseous state.
The Celsius temperature scale has 100 degrees between freezing and boiling.
no... 139 Celsius is above the boiling point of water.
Water would be found in a gaseous state at 130 degrees Celsius, as this temperature exceeds the boiling point of water (100 degrees Celsius at standard pressure). At this temperature, water molecules have enough kinetic energy to overcome intermolecular forces and transition from liquid to gas. Therefore, water would exist as steam or water vapor at 130 degrees Celsius.
About 24 degrees Celsius.
At 75 degrees Celsius, water is in a liquid state. It remains a liquid because this temperature is below its boiling point of 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure. Therefore, water at this temperature would be warm but not gaseous or solid.
Nitrogen would be a gas at 25 degrees Celsius.
The state of argon at 20 degrees is a gas.