if it is heated to much it will blow up as it is flammable and explosive it is also dangerous if pressurized in a container
The specific heat of argon is approximately 0.5204 J/g°C. This value represents the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of argon by 1 degree Celsius.
The specific heat capacity of argon is 0.520 joules per gram per degree Celsius.
The specific heat of argon is approximately 0.5205 J/g°C at a constant pressure of 1 atm.
Argon is a poor conductor of both heat and electricity. As a noble gas with a full valence shell of electrons, argon does not readily participate in chemical reactions, resulting in low thermal and electrical conductivity.
gases do not conduct heat or electricity well. metals conduct both well. but argon is a conductor
The dog gets warm. :)
It gets very hot.
It gets hotter
it gets colder
Captain Crunch gets angry.
When you add heat to liquid water it gets warm. If it gets warm enough it will boil and evaporate.
Argon won't burn. It is used in industrial processes like welding and metal smelting as a shielding gas. Some of those processes will heat the argon to 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, and it doesn't burn. WRONG Henry Cavendish died when he heated Argon
it either shatters, or just gets very hot.
The specific heat of argon is approximately 0.5204 J/g°C. This value represents the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of argon by 1 degree Celsius.
what happens is that the heat gets trapped in the container and it turns foggy
The specific heat capacity of argon is 0.520 joules per gram per degree Celsius.
The specific heat of argon is approximately 0.5205 J/g°C at a constant pressure of 1 atm.