This is totally unanswerable. The temperature of the water depends on its total environment. Whilst the sun is a source of energy, it may be shining on the outside of the dark room and heating it up. There may be other heat sources keeping the room warm. There may be a wind blowing outside, keeping the sunlit one cool. It's not about light and dark, it's about heat.
The temp is the heat so it can't be hotter than the heat :)
The water will get hotter. Its molecules will move faster, and the temperature goes up.
i think 50% but the hotter the temperature is the more salt will dissolve
room temperature water. the hotter water get the more quickly it moves
Because the room temperature bananas are hotter than the frozen and then the room temperature bananas rot.
The hotter the sensor, the greater its errors.
Because at room temperature the molocules are vibrating at such a rate so that the water appears to be a liquid. if they sped up, the water would get hotter until eventually it got so hot that the water changed state in to steam. if it gets colder, it slows down and gets harder, until eventually it turns into ice.
Because at room temperature the molocules are vibrating at such a rate so that the water appears to be a liquid. if they sped up, the water would get hotter until eventually it got so hot that the water changed state in to steam. if it gets colder, it slows down and gets harder, until eventually it turns into ice.
Room temperature water is the same as room temperature which ranges from 14C-25C (59F-77F)
It depends because water and liquid has tiny tiny drops that can be 50 degrees or drops that can be 90 degrees. You only feel the average of the water or liquid. Room temperature is colder and hotter depending on the average liquids and tiny tiny drops
yes,at room temperature by decreasing the pressure we can boil the water.
Room temperature air. The water keeps it fresher.