When you heat water to 100 degrees Celsius, it boils and turns into steam.
At 100°C, water boils and changes from a liquid to a gas. It is the boiling point of water at standard atmospheric pressure.
No, boiling point is a physical property of a substance, not a chemical property. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances to form new substances.
No, not all liquids freeze at 0°C. The freezing point of a liquid depends on its specific chemical properties. Water freezes at 0°C, but other liquids, such as alcohol or oil, can have different freezing points.
The boiling temperature of salt water is higher than that of pure water due to the presence of dissolved salt. The exact temperature will vary depending on the concentration of salt, but typically it ranges from 100.1°C to 108.7°C.
it freezes at 0C and boils at 100C
130c is very hot (water boils at 100c)
When you heat water to 100 degrees Celsius, it boils and turns into steam.
It boils at 373 degrees kelvin. Kelvin is just Celsius plus 273. Water boils at 100C, 100+273=373, so 373K.
100C is at sea level. Water boils at different temperatures based on the altitude you are at. Atlanta is 738 to 1050 feet in elevation. In Denver Co. at 5,280 feet you will find it boils at far less than 100C.
Water stays at a constant temperature when it boils unless it is under pressure. More heat just makes it boils faster. The boiling temperature is around 212F or 100C varying somewhat with the altitude and the purity of the water.
Water stays at a constant temperature when it boils unless it is under pressure. More heat just makes it boils faster. The boiling temperature is around 212F or 100C varying somewhat with the altitude and the purity of the water.
Water stays at a constant temperature when it boils unless it is under pressure. More heat just makes it boils faster. The boiling temperature is around 212F or 100C varying somewhat with the altitude and the purity of the water.
If you mean 100C, then that would be water.
Water boils into steam at 100C or 212F at sea-level pressure.
This question is too vague to answer: many different substances boil at many different degrees Celsius. In fact the same substance can be made to boil at different temperatures by changing the pressure acting on it.
At 0°C, water freezes and turns into ice. At 100°C, water boils and turns into steam.