I'm pretty sure that it is a 100 degree Celsius because when water is boiling it becomes a gas so I think I'm right
Added:
But it is dependant of pressure. When you are high in the mountains water is boiling easier and at lower temperature because of the lower pressure (Henry's Law, I believe).
Boiling eggs in boiling water at 95 oC will take significantly longer!
Yes, water can exist as a liquid at 50 degrees Celsius. The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius, so at 50 degrees Celsius, the water is below its boiling point and remains in a liquid state.
Water will change from a solid to a liquid at 0°C at standard atmospheric pressure of 760 mm of mercury.
Both scales use "degrees" but they are not the same size.Celsius degrees are larger intervals, so a change in "Celsius degrees" is larger than an identical numerical change in "Fahrenheit degrees."A change of 1 Celsius "degree" is the same change as 1.8 Fahrenheit "degrees", as is seen in the difference between the freezing and boiling point of water. 100 Celsius degrees (0° to 100°C) is the same temperature change as 180 Fahrenheit degrees (32° to 212°F).
same size. Between freezing water and boiling water, there are 180 Fahrenheit degrees (32 to 212) and 100 Celsius degrees (0 to 100). So Fahrenheit degrees are smaller, because it takes more of them to cover the same range of temperature. 1 Fahrenheit degree = 5/9 of a Celsius degree (0.555...) 1 Celsius degree = 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees
Water at 0 degrees Celsius is in a solid state, known as ice.
The triple point of water is zero degree Celsius this is because 1)zero degree Celsius is the melting point of ice. 2)water changes from liquid to solid in zero degree Celsius.
Liquid water changes from a liquid to a solid at around 0oC.
No, water turns into ice at 0 degrees Celsius. At 4 degrees Celsius, water is still in its liquid form.
As the water vapor cools at 101 degrees Celsius, it will undergo a phase change and condense into liquid water. This is because the cooling causes the water vapor to lose energy and come together to form liquid droplets.
water is a liquid aT 15oC Water is a solid (Ice) below 0oC Water is a vapour (steam) above 100oC.
Water is in liquid state at 25 degrees Celsius. This is the temperature at which water transitions from a solid (ice) to a liquid state.
When liquid water freezes to form ice, the chemical composition of water does not change. It will be H2O whether it is in liquid state or solid state. So it is a physical change and not a chemical change.
To change liquid water into a solid, you need to lower the temperature below 0 degrees Celsius to freeze it. To change liquid water into a gas, you need to raise the temperature above 100 degrees Celsius to evaporate it.
Water evaporates faster at 100 degrees Celsius compared to 200 degrees Celsius because at 100 degrees Celsius, water reaches its boiling point and undergoes a phase change from liquid to gas. At 200 degrees Celsius, water is already in the vapor state, so there is no further evaporation taking place.
water at 250 degree Celsius exists in gaseous state
Yes, water can exist as a liquid at 50 degrees Celsius. The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius, so at 50 degrees Celsius, the water is below its boiling point and remains in a liquid state.
Water will change from a solid to a liquid at 0°C at standard atmospheric pressure of 760 mm of mercury.