Typically, compounds with lower boiling points have lower retention times; however, there are exceptions to this rule that depend on the polarity of the stationary phase and the compounds involved.
The blast saturation term is basically referring to the boiling point. Everything has a different boiling temperature so please be more specific about what you want to know.
well basically you just get water at boil it when you see steam you know you have reached the boiling pointbecause the boiling point is just the temperature at which the liquid turns into gas bubbles =)
I suspect the intended answer is "boiling point", though strictly speaking that's not true: a material may not haveone or the other of these things at a particular pressure, which makes it problematic to talk about whether or not the one that doesn't exist is "lower" or "higher" than the one that does.I am pretty sure that the answer "triple point temperature" is strictly true. However, unless you're in a physical chemistry class, your teacher probably doesn't expect you to know what a triple point temperature is, and may not know themselves.
I think you might have wanted to tell us a little more information. It may be of use to know that absolute zero, 0 K = -273 C; the freezing point of water 0 C =273 K, and the boiling point of water, 100 C = 373 K
The word know is not a noun, it is a verb (know, knows, knowing, knew, known). Example: I know what you are doing. A related noun form is knowledge, a common noun.
The boiling point of water, if it is pure, is 100 degrees Celsius at standard temperature and pressure. Since there is no way of knowing the purity of creek water unless it is analyzed, there is no way to know its boiling point. However, the more impure it is, the higher the boiling point.
If the temperature is below the melting point, you know it is in the solid state. If the temperature is below the boiling point, and above the melting point, you know it is a liquid. If the temperature is above the boiling point, you know it is a gas, etc. (Note: melting point is the same as freezing point).
it is we dont know
Chlorine is an element, and by itself forms Cl2, which is normally a gas. From Wikipedia: Boiling point: 239.11 K (-34.4 °C, -29.27 °F). I suspect, however, that this is not what you actually wanted to know; but without knowing more about exactly what you are trying to do, I can't come up with a better answer.
The melting point of magnetite(Fe3O4) is 1538 Celsius, but does anyone know the boiling point?
In chemistry i love it my teacher is the best I'm just wasting my time on this website because if you don't know it you won't know it. Ivan pulley
If you know the melting point and boiling point of a substance, you could look them up in a table to see what substances have those melting and boiling points. In practice, there are lots of other tests you'd probably want to do in addition, because in general there's no guarantee that an unknown substance is a single pure compound.
they are the same... dont know who wrote this but it can be the same such as dry ice, or different such as water. however boiling point will sometimes be higher than melting point
We know that the gas oxygen has a boiling point of about -183 degrees C. The gas hydrogen has a boiling point of about -253 degrees C.
The lower the amount of substance, the faster it reaches the boiling point. The more the amount of substance, the longer it takes to reach the boiling point. Hope that this is what you wanted to know! :)
the boiling point of Orange Juice is 890 i know this because i did a lot of research on this that you should do too instead of taking my answer you should research and find out the boiling point of juice is 890
If you know a boiling point, you can separate two different liquids that are mixed together. If the two liquids have different boiling points, you can boil them both. One of the liquids will reach its boiling point before the other liquid and start to evaporate. One of the liquids will have evaporated and will be separated from the liquid with the higher boiling point. This is called distillation. Jarachia ~ x