It is the equivalent of 32 degrees Fahrenheit
The freezing point and melting point of a substance are the same, so the melting point would also be 52 degrees celsius.
The freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is equal to 0 degrees Celsius. The freezing point of platinum is 3,214.9 degrees Fahrenheit, which is equal to 1,768.3 degrees Celsius.
The melting point would also be 21 degrees because the freezing point and melting point of a pure substance is exactly the same.
20 degrees Celsius is a temperature or a temperature range on the Celsius scale, where 0 is the freezing point of water and 100 is the boiling point of water. If the air temperature is 20 degrees Celsius, the weather is cool but not cold. If a pot of water is raised in temperature by 20 degrees Celsius it is heated by a set amount. 20 degrees Celsius is the same as 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
The condensation point of water is the same as the boiling point of water. This occurs at 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius.
The freezing point and melting point of a substance are the same, so the melting point would also be 52 degrees celsius.
(1749 degrees Celsius, 3180 degrees Fahrenheit)
No, boiling point is not the same as melting point. Boiling point is the point at which a liquid begins to become a gas. (Water begins to become water vapor at about 212 degrees fahrenheit, or 100 celsius) Melting point is the point at which a sold begins to become a solid. (Ice begins to become water at about 32 degrees fahrenheit, or 0 degrees celsius)
The same as the melting point: exactly 273.15 degrees Kelvin (0 Celsius)
The melting point is the same or nearly the same as the freezing point which is zero degrees Celsius. By melting point I must assume that you are talking about frozen water which freezes and therefore thaws at zero degrees C. This can be changed by adding NaCl or Salt to the water, but I won't go into that since that is not what you asked. The Celsius scale has 0 for it's boiling point and 100 for it's freezing point.
The melting point of a solid is the same as the freezing point of a liquid. For example, water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 Celsius), so ice would melt at 32 degrees Fahrenheit( 0 Celsius).
I'm not completely sure but if i had to answer I would say about 100 degrees Celsius.
Yes the melting and freezing points are the same.
The freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is equal to 0 degrees Celsius. The freezing point of platinum is 3,214.9 degrees Fahrenheit, which is equal to 1,768.3 degrees Celsius.
The boiling point of Yttrium is 3609 K (3336oC or 6037oF). (3336 °C, 6037 °F)
The answer is that the temperature a substance freezes is also its melting point. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius into ice and if you heat ice up to 0 degrees Celsius it MELTS to give you water. Evaporation is the change from liquid to gas and condensation is the change from gas to liquid (for water this happens at 100 degrees Celsius).
Calcium does not have a definet freexing point but yet it has a melting point, a boiling point, and a density.