EEEEWWWWW!!!! Creepy question
2007-07-31 06:33:46
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answer #1
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answered by ♥ Etheria ♥ 7
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Blood's boiling point will be slightly higher than 212 F at sea level. (Atmospheric pressure has an affect on Boiling Point) To find the actual temperature that blood will begin to boil you need to know it's salt content. With the correction for salt content you can get the initial temperature that it will begin to boil. As the water evaporates the boiling point will continue to rise due to the increasing salt concentration. There are other components that can affect the boiling point, but salt will be the major player.
2007-07-31 06:46:07
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answer #2
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answered by The Man 1
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There is none. Blood is based on water but with many things in solution and suspended solution. Most of what makes up the blood will be destroyed by the time the water begins to boil, so you'd start seeing to decomposition of the components. Theres no real answer to this except that the majority of it wouldnt boil until some temperature slightly greater than 100C.
Thats just gross by the way.
2007-07-31 06:34:59
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answer #3
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answered by billgoats79 5
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Blood is mostly water, but the more dissolved substances there are in water, the higher its boiling point becomes.
However, blood will not stay a liquid as it is heated. Chemical reactions will occur, and it will start congealing. The water will evaporate out of it, and the solid material will remain behind and start charring.
2007-07-31 06:36:30
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answer #4
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answered by lithiumdeuteride 7
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Approximately 100 degrees centigrade, or about the same temperature at which water boils. Blood is by and large made of water and its other elements do not significantly raise the boiling point.
2007-07-31 06:37:21
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answer #5
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answered by shindy9 2
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blood is merely millions of cells floating in a liquid (protein-rich water) the boiling point of water is 212 degrees Fahrenheit, and the cells' boiling point would be the boiling point of the compound with the highest boiling point. it would however, be possible to boil the water out of the blood and leave the dead cells.
2007-07-31 06:35:30
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answer #6
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answered by Fundamenta- list Militant Atheist 5
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I doubt that you can boil blood while it is either contained within a (human) body or without. Blood will coagulate before it will boil
2007-07-31 06:34:03
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Blood consists of many compounds... It does not have one boiling point.
2007-07-31 06:36:06
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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inside the human body?? why would it boil inside??, i would imagine its close to the boiling point for water!!
2007-07-31 06:33:53
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answer #9
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answered by mythbusters 3
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Usually occurs around 5:15 pm when some moron cuts you off on the freeway on your way home.
2007-07-31 06:33:22
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answer #10
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answered by chris m 5
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The same temperature that water does
2007-07-31 06:34:01
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answer #11
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answered by daanzig 4
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