Depends what you are storing, e.g food, medical suplies, anything.
For design purposes room temperature is 20 degrees Celsius ( 70 F. ), but there are variations- cold storage rooms, saunas, etc.
275 degrees
Well the lowest temperature that its possible to get to is -273 degrees Celsius. That's the farthest I know so it cant be below there. Improvement: It always is hot on Venus. The average temperature is about 480 degrees Celsius and it doesn't drop much even at night.
Mars. With an average surface temperature of -63 degrees Celsius, it is much colder than Earths average of +14 degrees Celsius - but it is the closest to it.
The average temperature on Saturn is -288 degrees Fahrenheit, or -178 Celsius. Much of the planet's temperature variation is horizontal.
2 degrees C
room temperature no more than 70 degrees fahrenheit
Average Temperature The average temperature is 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
3 degrees, or 50%
Cold storage should be 40 degrees Fahrenheit or colder but above 32.
The proper storage temperature for one gallon of milk is in the refrigerator with a temperature below 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Do not store the milk on the refrigerator door. Keep it on a shelf where it will stay cooler.
It is 31 degrees higher.
For design purposes room temperature is 20 degrees Celsius ( 70 F. ), but there are variations- cold storage rooms, saunas, etc.
8 degrees
Although 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit) is the temperature at which water freezes, it is not a good freezer storage temperature. Some yeasts can actually grow at 15 degrees F (-9 degrees C). The recommended temperature for freezers is 0 degrees F (-18 degrees C) or below.
A normal body temperature is 37 degrees Celsius or 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. A body temperature of 50 degrees Celsius is 13 degrees hotter than a normal body temperature. If your body temperature were to reach 50 degrees Celsius you be dead.
Define normal temperature... Room temperature is usually around 25 degrees whereas our body temperature is 37 degrees. Please be more specific then I might have further info