The temperature of a freshwater habitat can vary depending on location, season, and depth. However, freshwater habitats tend to be cooler compared to marine habitats, as they are not influenced by the warming effects of the sun and have lower salinity levels.
A hot water heater is designed to supply hot water to faucets, not cold water. It is not possible for a hot water heater to siphon into a cold water faucet. Each faucet is connected to either the hot or cold water supply lines, which are separate in a plumbing system.
When you add hot water to cold water, the cold water warms up because of thermal conduction. Some of the kinetic energy of the hot water transfers to the cold water on contact, eventually leading to a uniform temperature throughout.
hot water
When hot water and cold water are mixed together, heat flows from hot water to cold water and brings them to equilibrium at a temperature intermediate to that of hot water and the cold water That may be right, but I think that the hot water would be more dominant causing the cold water to almost instantly turn hot.
Instant coffee granules dissolve faster in hot water than in cold water.
If water is only drawn from the cold faucet, then no, the water heater is not involved. However, if water is drawn from the hot faucet- even for a few seconds- hot water IS withdrawn from the heater, and fresh cold water drawn in to be heated- even if the hot water did not make it all the way through the pipe to the faucet- and the water heater will work to heat that fresh cold water.
No, cold water is not hot. Cold water is at a lower temperature than hot water.
Water can be either hot or cold depending on the temperature. Water at room temperature is considered neither hot nor cold.
the pueo lives in a
HOT rises COLD sinks
Hot water is less denser than cold water and has a greater temperature.
Hot water is less denser than cold water and has a greater temperature.
Cold water
If you let hot water cool down, it will become cold water.
Tepid water is between hot and cold.
Yup... Both...tried it with my Class after reading James & the Giant Peach...even fresh vs. salt water...floated
good question