On Earth, about 160 degrees F.
Answer: That depends on a variety of factors: (1) what substance you are heating up (its heat capacity changes the result), (2) how many degrees you want to heat it up; (3) how fast you want to heat it up. About the third point, please note that the watt is a unit of power, NOT a unit of energy.
A Transverse wave propagates at 90 degrees to the direction the amplitude increases In other words the wave oscillates up and down yet moves from left to right! this is different from a longitudinal wave, which oscillates in the same direction as it moves
"Watt" is a rate of moving energy. The more watts you use, the faster the waterwill heat up. The fewer watts you use, the slower it will heat. If you can affordthe time to wait, then any amount of power will do the job, no matter how small.
550 degrees.
180 degrees
a heat wave can last a whole year in the Sahara but in most cases up to 2 months
heat wave
First, you need to melt the ice. Look up the heat of fusion of ice, and multiply that by the amount of grams.Then you need to heat the water, from zero degrees to 78 degrees. Look up the specific heat of water, and then multiply together all of the following: The specific heat; the mass; the temperature difference. Finally, add the two together.
3.8 x 10^5 Joules
Answer: That depends on a variety of factors: (1) what substance you are heating up (its heat capacity changes the result), (2) how many degrees you want to heat it up; (3) how fast you want to heat it up. About the third point, please note that the watt is a unit of power, NOT a unit of energy.
During a heat wave, a snowman would melt due to the increase in temperature. The snow that makes up the snowman would turn into water as it is exposed to higher temperatures.
The cast of Heat It Up Video - 1999 includes: Justin Jeffre as Himself (98 Degrees) Nick Lachey as Himself (98 Degrees) Drew Lachey as Himself (98 Degrees) Jeff Timmons as Himself (98 Degrees)
10
107 degrees Fahrenheit
A Transverse wave propagates at 90 degrees to the direction the amplitude increases In other words the wave oscillates up and down yet moves from left to right! this is different from a longitudinal wave, which oscillates in the same direction as it moves
At 430 degrees Celsius (806 degrees Fahrenheit), you would take a few hours of steady heat to burn, but the heat would kill you in a few minutes, unless you had some sort of protection.
Up To 3-4 days of a constant 90+ degrees.