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The two scales intersect : -40 °C is the same temperature as -40 °F

This is due to the offset of water's freezing point to 32 °F. Between 32°F and 0°F, the Fahrenheit temperatures are positive while the Celsius temperatures have already moved into the negative. By the point -40°, the larger intervals marked by the Celsius degrees have been "overtaken" by the smaller Fahrenheit intervals. Below this point, negative temperatures in Fahrenheit have larger values than the corresponding Celsius values, just as do all Fahrenheit temperatures above 0°C.

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14y ago
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8y ago

Celsius and Fahrenheit are the same only at -40 degrees to my knowledge.

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14y ago

They are same at the temperature of -40°C and -40°F.

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10y ago

F = C x 1.8 + 32

For C = F: F = 1.8F + 32 or 0.8F = -32 or F = -32/0.8 = - 40

The answer is the temperature -40

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16y ago

-40 is the same on both scales.

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Wiki User

14y ago

Minus 40 degrees (-40oC = -40oF)

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16y ago

-40

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8y ago

-40

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8y ago

-40 degrees

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Q: What temperature is Celsius and Fahrenheit the same?
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