60 degrees Celsius is relatively hot. To get an idea of the Celsius system, consider that: 0 degrees Celsius is where water freezes 20-25 degrees Celsius is room temperature 37 degrees Celsius is body temperature 100 degrees Celsius is where water boils
62 degrees Celsius equates to 143.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
It is 7 degrees above freezing point Celsius which is 0 degrees
80 degrees Celsius is too hot to live in but 80 degrees Fahrenheit is not.
One of the problems with the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales is that they are not linear. We cannot say, for example, that a cup of water at 40 degrees C is twice as hot as one as 20 degrees, or that water at 20 degrees is twice as hot as water at 10 degrees. The absolute -- or Kelvin -- scale solves this problem, because it is linear.
89 degrees Celsius is hot because water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
pretty hot it is 50 degrees Celsius higher then boiling water
Since water boils at 100 degrees Celsius, 158 degrees Celsius is very hot.
60 degrees Celsius is relatively hot. To get an idea of the Celsius system, consider that: 0 degrees Celsius is where water freezes 20-25 degrees Celsius is room temperature 37 degrees Celsius is body temperature 100 degrees Celsius is where water boils
Given that water boils at 100 degrees Celsius, I would say that 230 degrees Celsius is very hot.
Yes because water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius.
100 degrees Celsius
No because 300 degrees Celsius is extremely hot when you consider that the boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius.
4,666 degrees Celsius is extremely hot. 4,666 degrees Celsius is equal to 8,430.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
very hot
100 degrees celsius
At 98 degrees Celsius, water is very close to boiling (100 degrees Celsius). For most purposes that's close enough.