Yes.
Surface of the sun. Volcanoes and volcanic vents.
43 degrees Celsius is equal to 109.4 degrees Fahrenheit when rounded to the nearest tenth place.
22.2 C
Since you're working with the same units of measurement for all of your readings, you can just place them on a number line. -7 < -5 < 0 < 2 -7C is the coldest of these four.
Yes.
Yes, evaporation can occur at 0 degrees Celsius, but at a slower rate compared to higher temperatures. As long as there is enough heat energy for molecules to break free from the liquid surface, evaporation can still take place.
I am going to assume your talking about Fahrenheit. Which would take 32 degrees Fahrenheit for ice to begin to melt (albeit slowly). If you come from a place that uses Celsius its understandable to be confused by this at it will seem illogical as Celsius is a simpler and a more logical way to measure temperature.
To convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius 1 Subtract 32... this gives 40 2 Divide by 9... this gives 4.444444 3 Multiply by 5... this gives 22.222222 4 Round off to one decimal place... this gives 22.2 degrees Celsius
The hottest place can reach up to 138-159 degrees
Water evaporates faster at 100 degrees Celsius compared to 200 degrees Celsius because at 100 degrees Celsius, water reaches its boiling point and undergoes a phase change from liquid to gas. At 200 degrees Celsius, water is already in the vapor state, so there is no further evaporation taking place.
The inside of a kettle as water boils.
my bum!
I believe it's one of Neptune's Moons called Triton (or not but it's one of its moons i know for sure). It is just about 24 degrees Celsius above TOTALLY FREEZING.