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Question: Boiling point of the water on the Celsius scale will be, \(\begin{aligned} & A.0{}^\circ C \\\...

Boiling point of the water on the Celsius scale will be,
A.0C B.212C C.32C D.100C \begin{aligned} & A.0{}^\circ C \\\ & B.212{}^\circ C \\\ & C.32{}^\circ C \\\ & D.100{}^\circ C \\\ \end{aligned}

Explanation

Solution

Impurities in the water can affect the boiling temperature at which the water can boil in a small amount. And also a much larger variation in the boiling temperature can be observable at different altitudes from the sea level. The boiling point at the sea level will not be equal to the same at the peaks of Himalaya. This all will help you in solving this question.

Complete step-by-step answer:
Celsius which is also referred to as centigrade is a scale based on 00{}^\circ in the case of the freezing point of water and 100100{}^\circ in the case of the boiling point of the water. The Celsius scale is in common use wherever the metric system of the units has been taken care of. This has been commonly used in scientific work everywhere nowadays. Celsius has used 00{}^\circ as the melting point of the snow and 100100{}^\circ as the boiling point of water. This became the reason for the inversion of keeping 00{}^\circ on the cold end and also 100100{}^\circ on the hot end. In this way it has gained a lot of recognition and is nowadays used as widespread. Hence the boiling point of water in Celsius scale is mentioned to be 100C100{}^\circ C.

So, the correct answer is “Option D”.

Note: This scale was invented in 1742 by a Swedish astronomer named as Anders Celsius. That is why the scale has been named Celsius scale. This scale has been often known as the centigrade scale due to the 100100{}^\circ interval between the particular fixed points. If the atmospheric pressure gets decreased the water can boil at even smaller temperatures also. That is why as the height increases, the boiling point of the water also decreases.