Heat.
To make a fire hotter, you can add more fuel, increase the airflow, or use a fire starter like kindling or paper to help it burn more intensely.
To enhance the intensity of a fire and make it burn hotter, you can increase the supply of oxygen, add more fuel, or use a fire accelerant. These actions can help create a more intense and hotter burning fire.
You have to add AIR.
To make the barrel of water weigh 12 pounds, you would need to remove 8 pounds of water from the barrel.
When you heat ice it takes in the heat and its temperature rises until it reaches melting point. It then takes in heat without getting hotter. When it's all melted, then the water that it now is gets hotter and hotter. When it reaches boiling point more heat will simply turn it into steam without it getting hotter. If you keep adding heat to the steam then it will get hotter. The heat that you have to add to something to change its physical state (i.e. from solid to liquid or liquid to gas) but without it actually getting hotter, is known as 'latent heat'.
add fire
I would add -5
to make it diluted
It will either get hotter or evaporate, or perhaps a bit of both.
It get hotter and if it is frozen it melts. If it is melted it boils.
No I cant
To make a fire hotter, you can add more fuel, increase the airflow, or use a fire starter like kindling or paper to help it burn more intensely.
To make potassium chloride and water from potassium hydroxide, you would add hydrochloric acid (HCl). The reaction would be: KOH + HCl → KCl + H2O
To enhance the intensity of a fire and make it burn hotter, you can increase the supply of oxygen, add more fuel, or use a fire accelerant. These actions can help create a more intense and hotter burning fire.
To make a 500 dilution, add 1 part of the substance you are diluting to 499 parts of water. For example, if you have 1 mL of the substance, you would add 499 mL of water to make a total volume of 500 mL for the dilution.
Assuming you mean a solution of salt, you would add WATER.
You have to add AIR.