yes its possible in zone iv as there boiling water temp is 100 degree celcius n freezing 0 degree celcius.
The thermometer may have not reached 100 degrees because it wasn't left in the water long enough. Another possible reason is that maybe the water wasn't hot enough. It also depends on what type of water was put into the pot cold or hot.
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 =)
It depends on how hot I want it to be. If I want regular out-of-the-tap hot water, I stick my finger in it quickly and then shout and wave my hand about when it's actually hot. If I need boiling water to be a certain temperature, I measure the temperature with a candying thermometer.
there is no boiling point
- a thermometer with mercury - a thermometer with thermoresistance
You need a thermometer.
Ernst Otto Beckmann is not known for having his own method for measuring the boiling point elevation. Beckmann used ebullioscopy, which is the method for measuring the boiling point elevation, and cryoscopy, which is the method for measuring freezing point depression, to determine molecular masses of objects. He invented a thermometer to differentiate between temperature differences and values. This thermometer is known as the Beckmann Thermometer.
A good thermometer for measuring the temperature of boiling water is one that is calibrated so that 100oC is in the mid to upper range of the scale. A typical alcohol thermometer usually works nicely.
Although a thermometer CAN be used its presence affects the temperature.
1. The thermometer in the still head measures the boiling point of the liquid in the distillate. We can be sure of this because the boiling point of the boiling flask will vary based on how many compounds are in it. The thermometer measures the temperature of the vapor at the top of the column; this vapor will be cooled through the condenser and will condensate in the graduated cylinder at the product end of the apparatus. Therefore we are measuring the boiling point of the distillate vapor that is being condensed and collected.
The question to ask is: What is the boiling point of mercury (as mercury is the substance within a thermometer, unless of course you are referring to the material that makes up the thermometer itself).You can simply google that.But...it's 356.7° C
it is 212 degrees celsius
a thermometer
With a thermometer
No.
Celsius was invented as a way of measuring temperature. A scientist named Anders Celsius put a thermometer in water until it froze, and marked where the mercury level was. He then measured the level in boiling water. The temperature in boiling water was given 100 Celsius, freezing was given 0 Celsius.