At sea level water boils at 100 degrees C. Take your pan of water to the top of Everest and ,because there is less atmosphere at 29,000 feet, the water boils at around 90 degrees C. Put your pan of water in a sealed metal container and heat, the water boils above 100 degrees according to the amount of pressure within the pressure chamber. In steam locomotives the water in the boiler is under pressure and then superheated ,ending up at over 300 degrees C.
No when the water reaches is boiling point it slowly turns to vapors
In short, NO.If nothing is added to the water, the temperature will not change. And as long as the air pressure doesn't change, the temperature of the boiling water will not either.
Same reason hot water gets hotter when run longer
which gets hotter land or water
No minerals in the water will be remove when it is boiled.
When you boil water the oxygen content is reduced to zero. (All gasses are driven out,) Boiling it longer doesn't have much effect.
If you see blue it means that the flame is hotter. It will then (obviously) heat up whatever it is faster.
In short, NO.If nothing is added to the water, the temperature will not change. And as long as the air pressure doesn't change, the temperature of the boiling water will not either.
Even boiled distilled water will still have oxygen, but the oxygen will not be in elemental form as a dissolved gas.
Same reason hot water gets hotter when run longer
The fire is hotter than the boiling water, so it will melt faster over a fire.
Igloo-type cooler.
In general, foam is a better insulator than metal, and so foam would be expected to keep water hotter longer under most normal circumstances.
Seeds can germinate in cooled boiled water, so long as the water is no longer warm or hot. The act of boiling will actually clean the water, causing it to be sterile.
They take longer to get hotter and take longer to get cooler.
Called 'super heated' fluid
No, boiled water is simply boiled. Distilled water is when the steam from the boiling is gathered and rebottled.
Boiled water.