no
It has to be room temperature for the dough to rise.
each degree rise in temperature cause 10 beats rise per minute
More farmers started to make bio fuel crops rather than food crops. The bio fuel crops take resources such as land and water away from food crop production, which means that food crop prices may rise as demand rises.
Yes due to something called 'specific heat capacity', this is basically that the more water there is, the hotter it can get.
If the soil is hot heat rises and the air near and around the soil will rise to affect the other particiles of air.
If the soil is hot heat rises and the air near and around the soil will rise to affect the other particiles of air.
If the soil is hot heat rises and the air near and around the soil will rise to affect the other particiles of air.
No, shaking pebbles in a glass container will not cause the temperature to rise. The kinetic energy transferred from the motion of the pebbles will not generate enough heat to significantly affect the temperature of the container.
Yes, the volume of water can affect the temperature rise in the reaction between calcium oxide and water. A larger volume of water can absorb more heat energy released during the reaction, resulting in a lower temperature rise compared to a smaller volume of water. Additionally, the concentration of the resulting calcium hydroxide solution can also influence the temperature change.
I think that it does because if it is cold , your body temperature goes lower and if its hot or warm your body temperature will rise
Emitted particles transfer energy to surrounding atoms when they collide with them