Boiling Points for Water at Standard Pressure:
100 degrees C (Celsius or Centigrade)
373.15 K (Kelvin)
212 degrees F (Fahrenheit)
At standard pressure (the pressure of the earth's atmosphere at sea level), water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.
(The same temperature as 212 degrees Fahrenheit and 373.15 Kelvin.)
At lower atmospheric pressure (e.g. at higher altitudes), water will boil at a lower temperature.
If under higher pressure (e.g. inside a pressure cooker), it will take higher temperature than 100 degrees Celsius to make water boil.
The boiling point of water at 1 atm is exactly 99.97 degrees Celsius, which is almost always rounded to 100 degrees Celsius. It is 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. Or 212 degrees F
It's 100 °C, which means 212 °F
The boiling point of sea water is higher compared with pure water. Temperature remain constant during boiling.
the time of boiling of water depends upon the temperature provided to water.
A cup of boiling water since it has higher temperature. Note that heat transfer depends more on the temperature.
boiling it
When the salt dissolves in the water it raises the water's boiling temperature, so it stops boiling.
boiling water
The temperature of boiling water at sea level is 100 The temperature of boiling water at sea level is 211.149°F.
The boiling point of sea water is higher compared with pure water. Temperature remain constant during boiling.
the time of boiling of water depends upon the temperature provided to water.
Zero degrees C= Freezing temperature for water and one hundred degrees C= Boiling temperature for water.
Kelvin temperature scale indicates a boiling water temperature of 373º.
A cup of boiling water since it has higher temperature. Note that heat transfer depends more on the temperature.
Which is most likely be the temperature of boiling water? 100oC is the boiling point of pure water - when water is boiling, it stays at a constant temperature until all of it is evaporated.
It is the approximate boiling temperature of water.
With the microwaved water, it pretty much depends on the microwave Owens temperature. Though boiling water is 100 degrees Celsius. (I would like to add): The water's temperature depends how long the microwave runs and the power of the microwave. However, if the water is boiling in the microwave, it is the EXACT same temperature as water boiling on the stove. The microwave is just another method of boiling the water.
boiling it
The temperature remain unchanged.