Only if some of it boils away
When you heat something it becomes lighter, if it started of as a solid it will eventually become light enough to be a liquid, and liquids become gases. When you heat water to 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit) it becomes light enough to become vapour, at this point it also becomes lighter than air so it immediately rises. The reason you can see steam is that when it floats it cools from the air and forms droplets.
no, specific heat will always be 4.16
Yes, gold conducts heat faster than water due to its higher thermal conductivity. This means that gold will heat up more quickly when exposed to a heat source compared to water.
it gets hot and becomes gas Or the heat from the fire starts to excite the molecules in the water. These molecules then speed up as they move and start to separate. When these molecules start to move quickly and separate, they become lighter that air due to their increasing speed. The water molecules then are able to move into the air and become classified as a gas.
um...The best answer I can give to that is: eventually.If water is continually heated, it will eventually become a vapor/gas/steam, but if you have cold water and heat it up a bit, it will not become a gas. It takes a large amount of energy to convert water to steam.
When you heat something it becomes lighter, if it started of as a solid it will eventually become light enough to be a liquid, and liquids become gases. When you heat water to 100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit) it becomes light enough to become vapour, at this point it also becomes lighter than air so it immediately rises. The reason you can see steam is that when it floats it cools from the air and forms droplets.
At 212 degrees Fahrenheit, the particles in water speed up and become lighter than air. The steam rises.
Heat them up with a lighter or other heat source.
the water will not sterilize if you boil the water! the water still has bacteria in the water even if you heat it up; that's because some bacteria is heat resistant and will not die through the process.
Like a pan of water on a stove, the warmed water expands, becoming less dense, and lighter, so it rises to the top, and cold water circulates down to the bottom, where it is warmed and rises again. This method of heat transfer is called convection and it works with boiling water, heating the air in a room, or warming the atmosphere.
Press it in, if it does not heat up then it's not working.
They are not really lighter, they only seem lighter. Objects weigh the same in water as in air, but in the water, there is an additional force, of the water pushing the object up.
When water heats up, it undergoes a process called heat absorption. As the temperature of the water increases, its molecules gain energy and move faster, causing the water to become warmer.
Hot water. 1. Hot water rises 2. When water becomes hot the particles that make up water become less dense spreading them apart thus making water lighter.
Water heats up quickly when heat is applied from the bottom because hot air rises and creates circulation within the water, leading to more even distribution of heat. This process, known as convection, helps the water to heat up efficiently and quickly from the bottom up.
Microwaves can heat up other substances besides water. They work by causing molecules in food to vibrate and generate heat, so they can heat up a variety of materials, not just water.
By erosion. Heat, wind, water are some possible natural forces which cause erosion.