how we boil water without providing heat??
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take it to sahara desert that's it
saloni61:
it is based on physics topic
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Although water has some strange behaviour at the liquid-solid boundary, the liquid-gas boundary is quite standard. The boiling point drops with decreasing pressure. The familiar 100°C (212°F) is the boiling point of water at 1 atmospheric pressure (i.e., the mean pressure at sea level). When the pressure drops, the boiling point drops as well.
So, if you want to boil water, you have two options:
1. Add heat until the temperature reaches the boiling point at the fixed pressure.
2. Reduce pressure (e.g. by vacuuming the container water is in) until the boiling point at that pressure drops below the fixed temperature.
So, if you would rather not heat your water, you can lower the pressure around it. Then it will boil, but of course it does not mean that it is "hot"! Obviously not a way to cook your spaghetti.
So, if you want to boil water, you have two options:
1. Add heat until the temperature reaches the boiling point at the fixed pressure.
2. Reduce pressure (e.g. by vacuuming the container water is in) until the boiling point at that pressure drops below the fixed temperature.
So, if you would rather not heat your water, you can lower the pressure around it. Then it will boil, but of course it does not mean that it is "hot"! Obviously not a way to cook your spaghetti.
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