I think the answer is cool slowly because if you left something that was hot out, it would cool.
The specific gravity of ice would also be 0.917, as it is the same as the specific gravity of water because both ice and water are forms of the same substance, H2O.
gravity
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Specific Gravity is unitless. To determine the specific gravity of something you take the density of the substance divided by the density of water (assuming both densities are in the same units ie: g/cm^3, or lb/in^3So for platinum, whose density is 21.45grams/cm^3 you would take (21.45g/cm^3)/(1g/cm^3(this is the density of water)), so specific gravity=21.45This would be the same answer is you had your densities in terms of lbs.
Sound waves travel most slowly through an iron pole because iron is a solid material with tightly packed molecules that hinder the movement of the sound waves. Fresh water and dry air are both mediums through which sound waves can travel more easily compared to solid materials like iron.
A high specific heat for water means that it can absorb a lot of heat energy before its temperature increases significantly, so it heats slowly. Conversely, it also loses heat slowly because it releases a significant amount of energy to lower its temperature.
When water slowly bubbles underground, it can form geysers or hot springs. Geysers erupt intermittently, releasing steam and water into the air, while hot springs have a constant flow of warm water to the surface. Both are caused by underground volcanic activity or geothermal heating.
Both Specific retention and specific yield relate to the ratio of the volume of water (in a permeable unit of rock and/or sediment) to the total volume of the rock and/or sediment, as it relates to gravity. Specific retention is the ratio of the volume of water that is RETAINED against the pull of gravity, ...where-as specific yield is the ratio of the volume of water that is EXPELLED (yielded) against the pull of gravity. Again, ...both as a ratio to the total volume of the rock and/or sediment.
Yes, madreporite is a small, porous structure in echinoderms that allows water to enter the water vascular system in order to facilitate movement and other functions. It does not allow water to pass through to the outside of the body.
No it doesn't. Water has a very high heat capacity so it both gains and loses heat slowly compared to many other substances.
Evaporation and boiling are similar because both of them allow water to go through a physical change and have the water turn into a gas, by gaining energy.
The specific heat of both are essentially the same. i.e. it doesn't.
Aquifers are layers of porous rock which both hold water and allow it to move underground. Think of them as large sponges made of rock. We drill wells into the aquifer to extract water for human needs and new water flows into the point of extraction, re-filling the well. All works fine as long as more water ENTERS the aquifer than is removed from it.
The land mass is both dark and denser than water. It captures - and retains - heat more efficiently than water.
The specific gravity of ice would also be 0.917, as it is the same as the specific gravity of water because both ice and water are forms of the same substance, H2O.
both( condensation and hydrolysis) need enzymes to allow the reactions to run to completion. Both involve water usage Both deal with covalent bonds.
A mud staff is a hybrid of an earth and water staff. It will allow the players to cast spells without both water and earth runes in their inventory.