Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
Of water: 100 C and 212 F.
The boiling point of water is 100 degrees C
Water boils at 212°F (100°C) and freezes at 32°F (0°C).
Kelvin = Celsius + 273.15 [K] = [°C] + 273.15 Water freezes at 0°C which is 273.15 K. Water boils at 100°C which is 373.15 K.
The specific heat capacity of water between 25 C and 100 C is 4.1813 J / (g*K). Beyond 100 C, the heat capacity of water is 2.080 J / (g*K) So, it take 4.1813 joules of energy to heat 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius (Kelvin). Therefore, in order to heat 22 g of water from 25 C to 100 C (75 C), it would require: 4.1813 * 22 * 75 = 6899.145 J And, to heat 22 g of steam from 100 C to 125 C (25 C), it would require: 2.080 * 22 * 25 = 1144 J The combined amount of energy required would be: 6899.145 + 1144 = 8043.145 J
No, 100 C is the boiling point of water.
true
A conditional statement is true if, and only if, its contrapositive is true.
Statement: All birds lay eggs. Converse: All animals that lay eggs are birds. Statement is true but the converse statement is not true. Statement: If line A is perpendicular to line B and also to line C, then line B is parallel to line C. Converse: If line A is perpendicular to line B and line B is parallel to line C, then line A is also perpendicular to line C. Statement is true and also converse of statement is true. Statement: If a solid bar A attracts a non-magnet B, then A must be a magnet. Converse: If a magnet A attracts a solid bar B, then B must be non-magnet. Statement is true but converse is not true (oppposite poles of magnets attract).
if a is bigger than b and b is bigger than c a must be bigger than c... Transitivity
IF, in C and C++, is not a function - it is a statement. There are two parameters... if (expression) statement; The expression is evaluated. If it has logical result true, or arithmentic result not zero, the statement is executed; if not, the statement is not executed. The statement can be a single statement, in which it is terminated with a semi-colon, or it can be a block of statements, in which it is surrounded by braces.
Yes, the boiling point of water is normally at 100 degrees Celsius
The Delphic oracle's statement comes true. (Apex)
100 c = 212 f
Of water: 100 C and 212 F.
81.5 g at 15 °C in 100 g water 87.4 g at 20 °C in 100 g water 81.5 g at 15 °C in 100 g water 87.4 g at 20 °C in 100 g water
It is true (allowing for rounding).