The boiling point of what?
The boiling point of water is 100°C (at standard temperature and pressure; at a higher altitude water boils at a lower temperature than at sea level).
For other substances it is different, eg:
Hydrogen boils at -252.9°C
Alcohol (ethanol) boils at 78.37°C
Mercury boils at 367.7°C
Aluminium boils at 2470°C
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That would depend on what substance you mean
That varies from one substance to the next. For water it is 100 degrees Celsius.
1000 Celsius
If you mean water - it is 100 0C.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
For water, 100 degrees.
Minus 33.34 degrees Celsius
about 100 degrees Celsius
The boiling point for water is 212 degrees Fahrenheit, or 100 degrees Celsius, or 373 kelvin
The temperature of the water is 100 degrees celsius.
The boiling point is the temperature at which a substance boils. Different substances have different boiling points. The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius. You have to have an accurate thermometer to measure boiling point.
In Celsius, it is 100 degrees.
The Boiling Point Temperature is 212 degrees Fahrenheit and 100 degrees Celsius
Different substances have different boiling temperatures.
100 degrees celsius
the boiling temperature of water
0o Celsius for freezing and 100o Celsius for boiling.
about 100 degrees Celsius
Minus 33.34 degrees Celsius
Andrius Celsius was an astronomer who discovered the scale Celsius and said that boiling temperature is 0c and freezing 100c
27 kelvin = -246.15 degrees Celsius.
Each liquid boils at a different temperature. Pure water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
Andrius Celsius was an astronomer who discovered the scale Celsius and said that boiling temperature is 0c and freezing 100c