yes. no matter the amount of the water, it must still reach 212 degrees Farenheit to boil at sea level. The boiling point is the temperature, not the amount.
More water, more molecules of water being frictioned by the heating source, thus generating the same boiling point. Boiling point of a substance is not related to the amount, but to its molecular...
The boiling point of tap water is higher than that of distilled water because tap water contains many minerals and bacteria that have higher boiling points than of water in its natural state and thus...
Water's boiling points shouldn't be affected with impurities in it, unless it has been chemically altered on a mollecular scale, which couldn't be caused by impurities in the water. The only factor...
No. Though water boils at 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit, it does so at sea level. But up a mountain where the air pressure is lower, water will boil at a lower temperature.
We don't...