Generally, water boils at around 100 degrees C but it depends on the oxygen content and the altitude of the place where you are boiling it. Also the material out of which the water container is made affects the boiling point too. It's quite a complex question!
If its in Celsius then another 13 degrees are needed because water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
-16 degrees Celsius is 28.8 degrees below freezing (3.2 degrees Fahrenheit).
There are 100 intervals (degrees) between the freezing and boiling points of water on the Celsius (centigrade) scale. These "degrees" are therefore 1.8 times as large an interval as the "degree" defined on the Fahrenheit scale.
(-210) degrees Celsius = -346 degrees Fahrenheit
500 degrees Celsius = 932 degrees Fahrenheit.
100 degrees Celsius
Water boils at 100 degree Celsius
Water (H2O) will begin to boil at 100'C and will freeze at 0'C.Hope this Helps!
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius, which is equivalent to 373.15 Kelvin.
If its in Celsius then another 13 degrees are needed because water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
This kind of vague. One example is water will boil at 100° Celsius and 1 atmosphere pressure.
Zero Celsius
100 degrees Celsius.
This question is too vague to answer: many different substances boil at many different degrees Celsius. In fact the same substance can be made to boil at different temperatures by changing the pressure acting on it.
The boiling point of water is dependent on the atmospheric pressure. If you increase the pressure - for example, in a pressure cooker - the boiling point can be raised considerably. At high altitudes, the boiling point is significantly lower. At sea level, pure water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit which is the same as 100 degrees Celsius.
Boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius.
0 degrees Celsius is freezing, but really water freezes at just BELOW that temperature.