80°C is considered very hot, as it is equivalent to 176°F. It is above room temperature (around 20-25°C) and can be dangerous for human skin, causing burns.
Air moves from hot to cold.
Heat flows from hot to cold.
Hot air is hot because its molecules have higher kinetic energy, meaning they move faster and collide more frequently, creating heat.
The process being referred to involves a change from hot to cold.
Water can be either hot or cold depending on the temperature. Water at room temperature is considered neither hot nor cold.
It depends on whether you are saying 80F or 80C. Water at 80F will not burn but at 80C it will. 80C = 176F and that will give you a second degree burn in a couple of minutes.
Yes. It is pretty high, not unheard of, but still high.
50 degrees Fahrenheit is much cooler than 80C. 80C equals 175F
80C
20$ 80c
Yes
1 lakh
80c
The models 80C and 81C were available in the time period mentioned. These were offered in clip versions, (80C and 81C) and tubular mag versions.
Potassium Nitrate and Sodium Nitrate
80C to 100C with A/C
Certainly will do. It's very cold! Is it around -80C?