No.
0 degr.K (or more correctly 0 Kelvin) is absolute zero = minus 273.2 degr.C
No,0 Kelvin is absolute zero,cold as anything can get.
200 kelvin is much colder than 0 degrees F (200 kelvin = -99.67 F).
K is between -6 and 0
Yes, if K<0. No otherwise.
3*0 = 0 Dividing both sides by 3 gives 0 = 0/3 and therefore 0/3 is defined and is equal to 0. However, there is no number, k, such that k*0 = 3 and so division by 0 is not defined. If there were such a number k, then you could divide both sides by k to give 0 = 3/k. But there is no such k.
No,0 Kelvin is absolute zero,cold as anything can get.
200 kelvin is much colder than 0 degrees F (200 kelvin = -99.67 F).
Yes, 200 degrees Kelvin = MINUS 73.15 degrees Celsius
No. 0 degrees K(elvin) is what is known as absolute zero. it is the coldest temperature possible.
In the Kelvin system 0 is set at he coldest possible temperature which is called absolute zero. Each degree kelvin is equal to a degree Celsius. The freezing point of water is 273.15 K so absolute zero is -273.15 deg C. There can be nothing colder than 0 K.
J & K colder
K is between -6 and 0
Saturn is both hotter and colder than Earth. Saturn is a gas giant planet with a deep atmosphere of hydrogen, crushingly dense near the rocky core. The outer clouds are too cold, more than a hundred degrees below freezing, but the pressure farther down raises the temperature to hotter than the surface of the Sun.
172k
Yes, if K<0. No otherwise.
Zero degrees Celsius is about the same as 273 Kelvin. Zero degrees Kelvin is a temperature that has yet to be reached in the lab, or anywhere in the known universe because at zero Kelvin mass ceases to have volume. 0 Kelvin, although only theoretical, is the lowest temperature possible, therefore zero Kelvin is much, much colder.
3*0 = 0 Dividing both sides by 3 gives 0 = 0/3 and therefore 0/3 is defined and is equal to 0. However, there is no number, k, such that k*0 = 3 and so division by 0 is not defined. If there were such a number k, then you could divide both sides by k to give 0 = 3/k. But there is no such k.