When a substance is heated, a heating curve shows the changes in temperature as well as the physical state of the substance. A heating curve can chart the temperature versus the time elapsed as the changes take place.
Supply curve
The heating curve for mercury illustrates the changes in temperature and phase as mercury is heated from solid to liquid and then to gas. Initially, mercury starts as a solid at low temperatures, where it heats up until it reaches its melting point (−38.83 °C), transitioning to a liquid state. As the temperature continues to rise, the liquid mercury heats until it reaches its boiling point (356.73 °C), at which point it vaporizes into a gas. The curve shows plateaus during the phase changes where temperature remains constant while the substance transitions between solid, liquid, and gas phases.
It is a graphical depiction of the supply schedule that illustrates that relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied.
everyone has a possibility of being productive but most likely nothing will get done.
A production possibilities curve illustrates how efficient an economy is by indicating the possibly opportunities in the economy. This will also illustrate the relevant costs entailed in the production.
heating curve is hotter than the cooling curve
The related link below illustrates 3 ways of drawing a curve. The techniques are easily adapted to a quadratic curve.
The heating curve for glass would show a gradual and steady increase in temperature until it reaches its softening point, where it begins to deform. In contrast, the heating curve for water would show a relatively stable temperature increase until it reaches its boiling point, at which point the temperature remains constant until all the water has evaporated.
The forgetting curve illustrates the decline of memory retention over time. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgetting_curve for more information.
That is the boiling point
Supply curve
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it must be an atom
When a substance is heated, a heating curve shows the changes in temperature as well as the physical state of the substance. A heating curve can chart the temperature versus the time elapsed as the changes take place.
A J-shaped curve is often referred to as exponential growth, which illustrates a rapid increase in a population or entity over time. This curve demonstrates a steady rise and acceleration in growth without any limiting factors in place.
It is a graphical depiction of the supply schedule that illustrates that relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied.
everyone has a possibility of being productive but most likely nothing will get done.