yes, you can have water at 0 degrees CELSIUS.
Yes, water can exist in liquid form at 0 degrees Celsius under normal atmospheric pressure. However, it will freeze into a solid state (ice) if the temperature drops below 0 degrees Celsius.
49 degrees Celsius = 120.2 degrees Fahrenheit
0 degrees Celsius.
Water freezes and becomes a solid at 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a gas at O 0C. I don't understand "0 degrees of pressure" and the relation with water.
Water takes liquid form between 0 and 100 degrees.
zero degrees Cecilius
0 degrees CELSIUS. Ugh... Americans...
the boiling point of water in degrees Cecilius is 100
On the Cecilius scale water freezes at 0 degrees at STP. Therefore below the surface of a boy of WATER on Earth, the temperatures will always be positive.
Water freezes at zero degrees Cecilius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
49 degrees Celsius = 120.2 degrees Fahrenheit
143.6F
166 degrees
8 degrees Celsius = 46.4 degrees Fahrenheit
Approximatly 150oc
in water
Celsius and centigrade are the same measure of temperature