it does not change
The water has already reached the 212 degree boiling point. At 212 degrees the water can exist as either a liquid or a vapor. Absorbing the latent heat pushes liquid to the vapor state without any change in temperature.
evaporative temperature
moment when it needs to go to rehab
Temperature and pressure are two factors that can cause a phase change in a substance. A substance will change from one phase to another when its temperature or pressure surpass a certain threshold, known as the melting point, boiling point, or sublimation point.
it changes depending upon the temperature
it does not change
it does not change
it does not change
The boiling temperature of an element can change by changing the pressure.
The water has already reached the 212 degree boiling point. At 212 degrees the water can exist as either a liquid or a vapor. Absorbing the latent heat pushes liquid to the vapor state without any change in temperature.
At the boiling point the temperature remain unchanged.
Liquid changes to a gas is the BOILING POINT. Conversely, when a gas changes to a liquid it is the CONDENSING POINT. For a given substance in the same given conditions, the temperature of the Boiling/Condensing point is the same.
Yes
The water has already reached the 212 degree boiling point. At 212 degrees the water can exist as either a liquid or a vapor. Absorbing the latent heat pushes liquid to the vapor state without any change in temperature.
Because that is the hottest temperature it can get.
In this first heat boil the water at its boiling point that is 100 degree Celsius, when the temperature is reached then heat supplied to water not boils the water it is used to change the state of the matter means heat is used to overcome the forces of attraction to change its state and the heat is latent heat of vaporisation.so this is latent heat (hidden heat) which not increase the temperature for some time.
The boiling point graph shows that as temperature increases, a substance changes from a solid to a liquid, and then to a gas. The graph reveals the specific temperature at which this phase change occurs, known as the boiling point.