During boiling the temprature remains constant and as soon as the water is bolied the temprature again rises.
Yes it does... but Im not sure why...
it gets hotter has it starts to boil more so its more likely to be hotter than ust warm water in a pan in the beginning of the boiling
If you leave water alone, it is in liquid form. If you raise the temperature of water to boiling, it creates steam. Is this a gas? If you lower the temperature to freezing, it becomes a solid.
393K Kelvin starts from -293oC
== == The amount of force that is holding the molecules of the substance together (intermolecular forces). A lot of things factor into this, including: * Hydrogen bonding * Ionic interactions * Hydrophobic interactions * Van der Waals forces * Permanent dipole-dipole interactions The stronger the intermolecular forces are (per molecule), the higher the boiling point will be, as it will require a greater amount of heat energy to overcome the intermolecular forces that hold molecules in a liquid state.
When the helium balloon starts gaining height, the pressure decreases and as the gas molecules are very freely movable (higher than the normal). They move apart from each other in the mean while they make the balloon to expand. The decrease in atmospheric pressure relative to pressure inside the balloon causes it to expand.
Temperature! :) doing a crossword puzzle on it right now!
If you heat water its temperature will increase until it reaches 100 degrees C, at which point it starts to boil. Boiling means it is all changing into a gas. Whilst it is boiling, the temperature remains constant, because the energy is being used to separate the particles instead of making them move faster. Not until the liquid has become gas does the temperature rise again.
If you heat water its temperature will increase until it reaches 100 degrees C, at which point it starts to boil. Boiling means it is all changing into a gas. Whilst it is boiling, the temperature remains constant, because the energy is being used to separate the particles instead of making them move faster. Not until the liquid has become gas does the temperature rise again.
If you add energy to a boiling liquid, it will just boil faster, but the temperature will remain the same, at the boiling point. All the energy goes into phase change, not heating.
Boiling point means the temperature a substances starts to boil or evaporate
Evaporation occur at any temperature.
If you heat water its temperature will increase until it reaches 100 degrees C, at which point it starts to boil. Boiling means it is all changing into a gas. Whilst it is boiling, the temperature remains constant, because the energy is being used to separate the particles instead of making them move faster. Not until the liquid has become gas does the temperature rise again.
A liquid starts to evaporate at its boiling point. Boiling is the action of the liquid turning into a gas (evaporation)
Temperature rises, liquid starts boiling becoming vapor
stays the same
Boiling point is a temperature at which the substance starts boiling. Every substance and material can exist in 3 forms: gas, liquid and material. and for example the boiling point of a water is 100 degree celsius.
Yes. In any process that is not "infinitely slow", entropy will increase.