Sentences with phrase «liquid at these cold temperatures»

Not exact matches

Set aside at room temperature, stirring frequently until the liquid is cold and just beginning to thicken very slightly (but is still liquid and pourable).
Nitrogen is one of 118 known elements and because it evaporates at low temperatures, it typically exists as a gas and in order for it to remain in a liquid state it must be kept at extremely cold temperatures.
It won't set at room temperature unless it's really cold where you live because once saturated fats turn to liquid, they need to be cold to firm back up.
«What we do know is that Hypatia was formed in a cold environment, probably at temperatures below that of liquid nitrogen on Earth -LRB--196 Celsius).
Most sources used in labs today have to be very cold (at the temperature of liquid Helium, about -270 C), which requires large and expensive refrigerators.
Unlike most solids, like salt and sugar, which dissolve better in hot liquids than they do in cold, gases dissolve more readily at low temperatures.
Working with a polymer that is liquid at cold - storage temperatures but solidifies as it warms to body temperature, Stephan may be able to create a T - cell depot that is even less invasive and easier to administer.
Now, recent back - to - back breakthroughs are revealing the bizarre behavior liquid water adopts at the coldest temperatures ever achieved, Gizmodo reported.
They are liquid even at cold temperatures, go rancid easily and break down into free radicals when heated.
Therefore, if you live in a colder climate (like I do in upstate NY), it will be solid at room temperature; however, if you live in a warmer climate, it'll be liquid at room temperature (because room temperature in that climate is over 76º).
It won't set at room temperature unless it's really cold where you live because once saturated fats turn to liquid, they need to be cold to firm back up.
Oils that are consisted of monounsaturated fats are usually liquid at room temperature but start to solidify when exposed to cold temperatures.
Coconut oil hardens in cold temperatures, softens at room temperature, and melts to a liquid, so what consistency you choose will depend on how you plan to use it.
According to [Moelg and Hardy, 2004], if air temperature were 1 degree C colder than at present, the potential ablation would be reduced by 14.2 millimeters per month (liquid water equivalent).
The second thing that must occur; after the water Temperature stalls at 273.15 Kelvins, is that 80 calories per gram of water, must be removed to some colder heat sink, again per the second law, and only after that heat energy, is sucked out of the water by a continuous thermal chain of ever cooler thermally conductive media, to some far cooler place, can the liquid water molecules close in on each other as the water turns to ice.
So on condensation, under the still rising hotter lighter air carrying on doing its thing and perhaps adding new layers, there would be the accompanying volume and temperature decrease of that first previously rising lighter volume now heavier liquid water and added to by the adjacent volumes of heavier colder air flowing beneath the still rising lighter hotter and into the space now available on condensation of its neighbour, which all now being heavier will increase the pressure at the surface as they all sink together displacing the lighter.
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