its boiling
The Liquid will turn into gas. The boiling point corresponds to the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the atmospheric pressure. If the liquid is open to the atmosphere (that is, not in a sealed vessel), it is not possible to sustain a pressure greater than the atmospheric pressure, because the vapor will simply expand until its pressure equals that of the atmosphere.
Actually boiling is a point where the vapour pressure of any liquid (example: water) becomes equal to the surrounding pressure.
The higher the vapor pressure of a liquid at a given temperature, the lower the normal boiling point (i.e., the boiling point at atmospheric pressure) of the liquid.
impossible to answer this weight to liquid conversion without more info
The boiling point is defined as the temperature that the liquid spontaneously turns into a vapour throughout the liquid. This is dependent on atmospheric pressure as the higher the pressure the more energy is required to produce the gas /vapour bubbles in the liquid. We see this effect when water boils and the surface is disturbed by the bubbles rising to the surface - it is boiling. Water boils at a little over 60 oC (140 oF) at the top of Mount Everest but at 100 oC (212 oF) at sea level ie 1 ATM pressure. When water is boiled at a higher location than sea level it will boil at less than 100 oC depending on atmospheric conditions.
The temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the atmospheric pressure is called THE BOILING POINT.
its boiling
The boiling point of the liquid.
A liquid will boil when its vapor pressure equals the atmospheric pressure.
The Liquid will turn into gas. The boiling point corresponds to the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the atmospheric pressure. If the liquid is open to the atmosphere (that is, not in a sealed vessel), it is not possible to sustain a pressure greater than the atmospheric pressure, because the vapor will simply expand until its pressure equals that of the atmosphere.
When the vapor pressure equals atmospheric pressure at the surface of a liquid, it has reached its boiling point. This is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the pressure exerted on it by the surrounding atmosphere, causing the liquid to change into vapor.
As atmospheric pressure increase so does the boiling pont, when atmos. pressure decreases so does boiling point. A liquid boils when its vapor pressure equals atmospheric pressure.
The boiling point of a substance decreases as the atmospheric pressure decreases. This is because lower atmospheric pressure reduces the pressure pushing down on the liquid, making it easier for the liquid to vaporize. Conversely, higher atmospheric pressure increases the boiling point of a substance as more pressure is needed to overcome the atmospheric pressure and cause the liquid to vaporize.
An increase in pressure can stop boiling until at an increased temperature the vapor pressure equals the external pressure. That is the definition of boiling, when the vapor pressure equals the external pressure than the liquid will boil.
The normal boiling point(also called the atmospheric boiling point or the atmospheric pressure boiling point)is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of a liquid equals the atmospheric pressure at sea level, 1 atmosphere.The normal boiling point of water is about 100 degrees Celsius at a pressure of 1 ATM (i.e., 101.325 kPa).General Useful Information:The boiling point of a liquid is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the environmental pressure, but the environmental pressure may or may not be equal to the atmospheric pressure at sea level, 1 ATM.If the surrounding environmental pressure is less than atmospheric pressure, then the boiling point is less than the normal boiling point.If the surrounding environmental pressure is greater than atmospheric pressure, then the boiling point is greater than the normal boiling point.At the boiling point, adding enough heat to the liquid will cause the liquid to vaporize (that is boil or form a gas).
The temperature at which the pressure of the evaporating liquid equals the atmospheric pressure of the surroundings. For pure water at sea level on earth, this is 100 degrees celsius.
it begins to boil - Monsy