Lapse rate
big ol but
big ol but
An increase of 12 degrees.
121 degrees Celsius = 249.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, the "degrees" have the same name but are different sizes. (Celsius degrees are larger intervals than Fahrenheit degrees.) A change of 1 degree Celsius is the same as a change of 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
It is desirable to have water a few degrees colder than room temperature when the initial temperature was taken for accuracy to be achieved. This is affected by the amount of heat energy which escapes the surroundings when the water is above room temperature.
69 degrees Fahrenheit
Correct.
lapse rate
As I recall from flight school, the adiabatic lapse rate is 4.5oF per 1000 feet.
It is called adiabatic or an adiabatic process.
environmental lapse rate involves the actual temperature of the atmosphere at various heights. adiabatic cooling is the cooling of air caused when air is not allowed to expand or compress.
adiabatic
The rate at which adiabatic cooling occurs with increasing altitude for wet air (air containing clouds or other visible forms of moisture) is called the wet adiabatic lapse rate, the moist adiabatic lapse rate, or the saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
I'll assume the last word was 'process'. Adiabatic processes are those that proceed without the temperature changing, whilst the pressure and volume do change. For practical purposes, sound waves passing through the air are adiabatic.
In an adiabatic process, the temperature is increased when it is compressed. There is an increase in internal kinetic energy, and because temperature is related to kinetic energy, it is also increased.
An adiabatic process is a thermodynamic process, there is no gain or loss of heat.
In adiabatic process heat is neither added nor removed from the system. So the work done by the system (expansion) in adiabatic process will result in decrease of internal energy of that system (From I st law). As internal energy is directly proportional to the change in temperature there will be temperature drop in an adiabatic process.
Raise the room temperature.