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Date: 9-12-2020
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Date: 30-12-2016
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THE CELSIUS (OR CENTIGRADE) SCALE
This is based on the behavior of water at the surface of the Earth under normal atmospheric pressure and at sea level. If you have a sample of ice that is extremely cold and you begin to warm it up, it will eventually start to melt as it accepts heat from the environment. The ice, and the liquid water produced as it melts, is assigned a temperature value of 0°C by convention (Fig. 1a). As you continue to pump energy into the chunk of ice, more and more of it will melt, and its temperature will stay at 0°C. It won’t get any hotter because it is not yet all liquid and doesn’t yet obey the rules for pure liquid water.
Once all the water has become liquid and as you keep pumping energy into it, its temperature will start to increase (see Fig. 1b). For awhile, the water will remain liquid and will get warmer and warmer, obeying the 1 cal/g/°C rule. Eventually, however, a point will be reached where the water starts to boil, and some of it changes to the gaseous state. The liquid water temperature, and the water vapor that comes immediately off of it, is then assigned a value of 100°C by convention (see Fig. 1c). Now there are two definitive points—the freezing point of water and the boiling point—at which there exist two specific numbers for temperature.
We can define a scheme to express temperature based on these two points. This is the Celsius temperature scale, named after the scientist who supposedly first came up with the idea. Sometimes it is called the centigrade temperature scale because one degree of temperature in this scale is equal to 1/100 of the difference between the melting temperature of pure water at sea level and the boiling temperature of pure water at sea level. The prefix multiplier centi- means “1/100,” so centigrade literally means “graduations of 1/100.”
Fig. 1. Ice melting into liquid water (a), liquid water warming up without boiling (b), and liquid water starting to boil (c).
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علامات بسيطة في جسدك قد تنذر بمرض "قاتل"
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أول صور ثلاثية الأبعاد للغدة الزعترية البشرية
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مكتبة أمّ البنين النسويّة تصدر العدد 212 من مجلّة رياض الزهراء (عليها السلام)
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