The boiling point of water depends on the air pressure, the standard 100 C boiling point is at sea level.
If you boil water at a high enough altitude, or in a vacuum chamber, it will boil at much lower temperatures.
Well the hot water contain latent heat that's why it boils at 6o degree centigrade as well at high altitude and in vacuum it boils at low temp.
Pradeep Kumar
Water boils at different temperatures depending on pressure. In an enclosed container where pressure can build up water can be made to boil at nearly 1000 degrees F. The reverse is also true, at lower pressures water will boil at a temperature less than 212 F. Where I live water boils at about 208 F. Electric power plants and naval vessels take advantage of this by boiling the water at a higher temperature. This very hot steam has more energy and makes the power plant more efficient.
An electric stove element can reach temperatures of up to 700-900 degrees Fahrenheit (370-480 degrees Celsius) during cooking. It is important to handle the stove with caution to prevent burns or accidents.
Hudson Bay
To convert 60 degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius, subtract 32 from 60 to get 28, then multiply by 5/9 to get approximately 15.56 degrees Celsius.
26 degrees Celsius is cooler than 60 degrees Fahrenheit. This is because 26 degrees Celsius is equivalent to about 79 degrees Fahrenheit.
Water boils at 100 Celsius.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure. To reach 60 degrees, it would need to absorb heat from a source hotter than 60 degrees, such as a stove or microwave. This heat would increase the water's temperature until it reaches the boiling point of 100 degrees, at which point it would begin to boil and transition to steam.
Yes, for water at 60 degrees Fahrenheit to boil, it must first absorb sensible heat to reach its boiling point of 212 degrees Fahrenheit. Then it must absorb latent heat to undergo the phase change from liquid to gas. This process of absorbing both sensible and latent heat is necessary for the water to transition from a liquid state to a gaseous state.
Boil enough water to encase chicken, make sure the water is hot enough that you couldn't stick your hand in it. Put the chicken in the water and count to 60. After this pull out the chicken and pluck the feathers, they should come right off
Honey does not boil at a fixed temperature like water does. Instead, the moisture content in honey causes it to gradually darken and thicken as it is heated. Heating honey above 140°F (60°C) can destroy some of its beneficial enzymes and nutrients.
you first find the Pa(N/m^s) of 60 degrees C. There should be a table in your book that has it (Saturated Vapor Pressure of Water) or just look it up. From there 60C is about 1.99*10^4 Pa. If you look for Pa to Atm ratio, there is about 101325 Pa to 1 Atm. (1.99*10^4)/(101325)= .196 Atm
Celsius uses 0 as the temperature when water freezes. This would be less than useless on Mars, because water would almost always be frozen on Mars. The boiling point of water would be more effective. Why?Because water boils at different temperatures depending on air pressure, and the air pressure on Mars is completely different to that of Earth's, you would need a thermometer where 100 degrees or maybe 0 degrees would be the boiling point of water there.The lower the atmospheric pressure is, the lower the temperature needs to be for water to boil. So, because on Mars the pressure is close to being a complete vacuum, water would boil at about 0 degrees C.Since it's about -60 degrees C on Mars, if 100 degrees Martian units was your boiling point, than (simple math 100- 60) +60 degrees Martian units might be a reasonable average temperature (using this method avoids always having negative numbers for your temperature).
Water boils at different temperatures depending on pressure. In an enclosed container where pressure can build up water can be made to boil at nearly 1000 degrees F. The reverse is also true, at lower pressures water will boil at a temperature less than 212 F. Where I live water boils at about 208 F. Electric power plants and naval vessels take advantage of this by boiling the water at a higher temperature. This very hot steam has more energy and makes the power plant more efficient.
The complement of any angle is the angle which adds to it to make 90 degrees. In this instance, an angle of 60 degrees adds to 30 to make 90 degrees. Therefore, the complement of 30 degrees is 60 degrees.
it is 60 degrees Fahrenheit
the water gets hoter intill it reaches 100 degrees and then it gives of steam which is a gas.
as long as it's not 60 degrees or colder