373 kelvin
100 celsius
kelvin is basically celsius + 273
The boiling point of mercury is 629.88 K on the Kelvin scale.
Kelvin temperature scale indicates a boiling water temperature of 373º.
The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius, which is equivalent to 373.15 Kelvin. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, where there is no molecular motion, while the Celsius scale starts at the freezing point of water.
The freezing point of water is 273.15 K and the boiling point is 373.15 K on the Kelvin scale.
The Celsius scale is an interval scale which means that the difference between 0 deg C and 10 deg C is the same as the difference between 10 deg C and 20 deg C. However, the zero of this scale is arbitrary which means that 20 deg C is not twice as hot as 10 deg C..The zero point of the Kelvin scale is not arbitrary: it is the point at which thermodynamic energy is zero and so the scale more versatile than an interval scale: it is a ratio scale and this means that 20 K is twice as hot as 10 K.
On Celsius scale it is 100 C and on Kelvin scale it is 373.15 K. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero and is used in scientific laboratories. Celsius is for general use and set 0 and 100 as melting and boiling point of water respectively.Different substances have different boiling points. For the same substance, the boiling point also depends on the pressure, although atmospheric pressure is often assumed.
373.15 K (Note that the degree sign is not used with the Kelvin scale)
Celsius and Kelvin each have 100 divisions from freezing to boiling.
The boiling point of mercury is 629.88 K on the Kelvin scale.
The boiling point of chloroform is approximately 334 K on the Kelvin scale.
The Kelvin scale is based on temperature. To add to the above, the Kelvin scale is based on the Celsius scale in that the measurment unit is the same. The difference is the starting point where 0 Kelvin is set at absolute zero, or -273.15ºC.
Kelvin temperature scale indicates a boiling water temperature of 373º.
In atmospheric pressure (ie at sea level), water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
The difference between the boiling and freezing point of pure water, at atmospheric pressure, is 100 on both, the degrees Celsius and Kelvin scales. It is 180 on the Fahrenheit scale. The USA and some Caribbean islands are the only countries whose official temperature scale is Fahrenheit; in all other countries, and specially amongst scientists, the scale used is Celsius or Kelvin.
It is a scale for temperature measurement where zero degree is freezing temperature for water and 100 is its boiling point under atmospheric pressure.
Pure water at STP boils at 100 degrees Celsius, which is 373.15 Kelvin.
No, the boiling point of water on the Kelvin scale is 373.15 K, while on the Celsius scale it is 100°C. These two values are equivalent as they represent the same physical phenomenon, just on different temperature scales.