Anything below 18oC (65oF).
This is independent from water, unless you're in an underwater swimmingpool livingroom.
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.
Marble is colder than room temperature
Yes, an object in a room can be colder than the ambient room temperature. For instance, if a cold drink is placed in a room, it can have a temperature lower than the surrounding air. This occurs because temperature is a measure of thermal energy, and the drink can lose heat to the warmer air until it reaches thermal equilibrium.
Depending upon the equal amount of salt that is present, more will dissolve in warm than room temperature than cold, and the rate of dissolution will be faster for warm water than room temperature than cold.
well for something to freeze it has to be 0 degrees or lower which is what ice is, frozen water. so the water has to be 1 degree or more to NOT freeze so the ice is colder than salt watercoz salt water is not frozen... does t6hat make sense? Actually, salt water CAN be colder than ice because the salt lowers the freezing point of the water.
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.
The temperature of water is typically colder than the temperature of the air.
The freezing temperature of water is 0 degrees celsius or 32 degrees fahrenheit so it is colder than the freezing temperature of water.
It is desirable to have water a few degrees colder than room temperature when the initial temperature was taken for accuracy to be achieved. This is affected by the amount of heat energy which escapes the surroundings when the water is above room temperature.
Marble is colder than room temperature
Yes, an object in a room can be colder than the ambient room temperature. For instance, if a cold drink is placed in a room, it can have a temperature lower than the surrounding air. This occurs because temperature is a measure of thermal energy, and the drink can lose heat to the warmer air until it reaches thermal equilibrium.
It is relatively colder than room temperature.
The water itself isn't frozen, so it doesn't have to be that cold. The ice in it only makes it colder than room temperature.
The future temperature of the water depends upon the surrounding air's temperature. So if the air around the test tube is colder than 20 degrees, then the water will get colder. If the air temperature is warmer than 20 degrees then the water will get warmer.
No, hot water does not freeze more quickly than room temperature water. In fact, hot water takes longer to freeze because it has to cool down to the same temperature as room temperature water before it can start freezing.
The freezing temperature of water on the Celsius scale is 0 degrees. Five degrees colder than that would be -5 degrees Celsius.
Yes, absolutely.