Depending how long it has been sitting in the room, and where it came from. If you just boiled it, and let it sit for an hour, i will still be hot, but if you boiled it and let it sit for a day, it will be the exact temperature of the room. The temperature of the room is normally between 68-75 degrees fahrenheit(20-23 degrees Celsius). Same thing goes with frozen water. If you have a water bottle in the freezer and is rock solid and take it out and set in on the counter that is "room temperature" again, it will obviously be colder than room temperature within a few hours after taking it out. It will however take much longer to warm up to room temperature than it would take the boiling water to cool down to room temp.
2007-07-24 07:58:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If the water has standing in a container fo many hours that has a small opening or is closed (large, tall jar, vase, etc) and is not near any heat sources it should be very close to room temperature.
If the water has standing in a container fo many hours that has a large surface exposed (shallow pan, skillet, frying pan, etc) and is not near any heat sources it should be slightly lower than room temperature due to the cooling effect of evaporation.
If either of the above is exposed to external heat sources such as a heating vent, direct sunlight, the temperature of the water will likely be higher than the room temperature.
Hope this helps
Good Luck.
2007-07-28 03:50:41
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answer #2
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answered by Comp-Elect 7
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It depends upon how long the water is in the room. If it is brouhgt cold or hot then the temperature of water will be accordingly.
If equilibrium state is attained then surely the temperature of water will be equal to the room temperature.
this is what i ve understand
2007-07-24 07:05:07
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answer #3
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answered by nasserr 1
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room temperature would be whatever the temperature of the room was.
For scientific calculations, room temperature is taken to be roughly 20 to 23 degrees Celsius with an average of 21 °C, about 72.5 degrees Fahrenheit (°F), 528 to 537 degrees Rankine (°R), or 293 to 298 kelvin (K
2007-07-24 06:07:20
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answer #4
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answered by klaryuk 3
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Room temperature maybe?
2007-07-24 06:04:54
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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u cant tell cause the water can be cold hot
but if we leave the water for sometime in the room hen it will change its temp to the room temp
2007-07-24 06:06:16
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answer #6
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answered by pokemon maniac 6
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um. the temperature of the room that you're in.
no, seriously - it's about 72 degrees.
2007-07-24 06:11:25
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answer #7
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answered by BelladS 2
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26.3 Degrees C
2007-07-24 07:40:19
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answer #8
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answered by soldevice 1
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room temp.
2007-07-24 06:09:15
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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