At sea level, water boils at:
212 F
100 C
373 K
2006-07-11 08:36:14
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answer #1
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answered by MeteoMike 2
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0. you do not need a bachelors, masters, or even a PhD. Really, you wouldn't have needed to graduate high school either. Just put the water in a pot on the stove, turn on the stove and wait.
(as to be a total jerk, water boils at: 100 C, 373 K, 212 F, or 617 R)
2006-07-11 08:42:20
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answer #2
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answered by Mr__Roarke 2
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That is not a constant number. Generally people say 100 degrees celcius (212 f?), but it depends entirely on the pressure...I've seen water boil at room temperature in low pressure.
2006-07-11 10:55:22
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answer #3
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answered by creative 3
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212 degrees F
100 degrees C
317.5 Kelvins
2006-07-11 08:56:22
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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212 degrees fahrenheit and 100 degrees celcius will boil water.
2006-07-11 10:05:45
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answer #5
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answered by The Frontrunner 5
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Actually you don't even need to graduate from high school to boil water. Definitely don't need an AA, BS, MS, or Ph.D.
So the correct answer is no degrees.
2006-07-11 08:55:46
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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At seas level ( 1 atm pressure)
100 c- 212 f - 373 k
2006-07-11 09:24:57
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answer #7
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answered by ebsaied 2
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100 degree Celsius or 212 degree Fahrenheit at normal pressure (at sea level)
2006-07-11 08:59:22
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answer #8
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answered by flori 4
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It depends on the elavation .the higher you are from sea level
the longer it takes to boil water
2006-07-11 08:34:43
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answer #9
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answered by Bob C 2
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212 f - 100 c at sea level
2006-07-11 08:31:20
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answer #10
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answered by highlander44_tx 3
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