There are a few temperature scale that science use offten. The most common scale is a centigrade scale.
Celsius
The two most common temperature scales are the Fahrenheit scale and the Celsius scale. However, the Kelvin scale is also used, primarily in science, to prevent negative temperatures.
Temperature scale used on most laboratory thermometers is a thermometer.
The scale we use for temperature is "degrees" (°). There are three temperature scales that are used today. The Kelvin (K) scale is used by scientists and for astronomical temperatures. The Celsius scale (°C) is used in most of the world to measure air temperatures. In the United States, the Fahrenheit scale(°F) is used to measure temperatures at or near the surface.
they used his body temperature
Science measurements use the metric system and the Celsius temperature scale is used for most measurements. The Kelvin scale is also used for measurements approaching absolute zero.
Celsius is the temperature scale that is used in most of the world.
The two most common temperature scales are the Fahrenheit scale and the Celsius scale. However, the Kelvin scale is also used, primarily in science, to prevent negative temperatures.
Temperature scale used on most laboratory thermometers is a thermometer.
commonly used? well fahrenheit and celsius/centigrade(same thing) for weather temperature. Then there is kelvin used in technical/scientific situations and thats about it for common usage so 3 is the answer. There are up to seven different temperature scales but only 3 are used commonly
Celsius
The generic name is "absolute temperature scale"; the most commonly used one is the Kelvin scale.
Fahrenheit.
Fahrenheit.
Science class.
Celsius, kelvin, and Fahrenheit kelvin is used most
In the United States, the Fahrenheit scale is commonly used to measure air temperature.
The Celsius (or Centigrade) scale is the predominant scale used to measure temperature worldwide. The United States is one of only a few countries where the Fahrenheit scale remains more common. A third scale, Kelvin, is used in some specialist applications, such as by physicists.