203 degrees F
100 Celsius or 212 Fahrenheit at sea level. As you go higher, the temperature drops as less force is needed to counter act air pressure. At 5000 feet above sea level (1524 meters) the temperatures are 95 C and 203 F.
Evaporation depends on the following factors - the temperature of the water at the air-water surface. The humidity of the air. The area of the air-water surface. The temperature of the air.
The melting point of water at 5000 meters is slightly higher than at sea level due to the lower atmospheric pressure. At this altitude, water will freeze at around 0.2 degrees Celsius.
he has a power level of 5000
'Hydrostatic Pressure' is the Term used for 'the force exerted by a body of fluid at rest. The pressure increases with increase in depth.There are two ways to Calculate water (clean water) pressure at any depth (both yields almost same results):1. The Hydrostatic pressure of water is 0.433 Psi/ft (Pounds per square inch Per feet). So at 5000 feet, the pressure is: 0.433 Psi/ft. * 5000 ft = 2165 Psianother way to go about it is:2. Water pressure increases at 14.7 psi every 34 feet depth. Thus Pressure at 5000 ft will be: (5000 ft / 34 ft) * 14.7 psi = 2162 Psi.
5000
The answer is actually partially dependent on the starting temperature of the water (heat capacity is a function of temperature). You will still be close enough for most purposes if you assume that it takes 1 calorie to heat 1 gram of water 1 °C. With this assumption it takes 1000 calories to heat 1 kg of water °C and 5000 calories to heat 1 kg of water 5 °C. 5000 cal = 5 kilocalories = 20929 joules.
5000 degrees do the fish stay nice and warm. I'm just kidding. You do not boil water for your fish tank but if your wondering water boils around 220 degrees
The atmospheric pressure is lower. When you are boiling the water, the water's vapour saturation pressure is able to match the atmospheric pressure faster therefore it boils faster and at a lower temperature.
5000 percent
The Wikipedia article on Color Temperature in the related link below, has some good information. The numbers refer to the temperature (in Kelvin) of a black body radiator (see the article) which radiates an equivalent color.Temperatures 5000 Kelvin and below will have a yellow-white hue and go to reddish (sometimes referred to as 'warm white'). Above 5000 K will have a blueish white hue (sometimes called cool-white). This may be seen in specifications for light bulbs or colors hue on a color printer or copier.