this is sorta a trick question because you cant have twice as cold, there is no such thing as cold just absence of heat...think about it so say its 100 deg celsius, can you still say twice as cold as 100 deg? nope
It would be Absolute Zero...... As cold as it can get..... −273.15° on the Celsius scale −459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale. 0° on the Kelvin Scale Other than Laboratory conditions. The nebula is the coldest known place to mankind it is about 5,000 light-years from your house on Earth and is in the constellation Centaurus. Atleast on the planet earth....... we can safely assume that it wont get "twice as cold"when its freezing outside at Zero Degrees :-)
The zero points on both the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales are arbitrary. These are, therefore, interval scales which means that 2 deg C (or F) is not twice as warm as 1 deg C (or F). In the absolute scale for temperature, 0 deg C is 273.15 K and so twice as cold (or half as hot) would be 136.575 K = -136.575 deg C.
-31 degrees Fahrenheit is twice as cold as zero.
It would be minus 32 degrees I think. Am I right?
no,the temp will be half as warm.
Karli
It is exactly twice of 184 which is 368 degrees Fahrenheit.
Convert the temperature to Kelvin. Kelvin starts from absolute zero; so twice the temperature represents twice the internal energy. After doubling the temperature in Kelvin, you can convert back to Celsius if you like.
well when i went to France (i live in england south west) it was around 26-32 degrees Celsius and i nearly fainted because of the heat! though I'm glad i went there cause it made me think twice about booking a hotel in Egypt where it was 41 degrees Celsius! 26 C = 78.8 F
No. It is hotter. However, it is not twice as hot since the Celsius scale is not absolute - Kelvin is the absolute scale for temperature.
100 degrees Celsius is the highest temperature. 100F is 37.8 C and 310.7K. 100C is 237.6F and 373K. 100K is -173C and -253.8F. So 100C is the highest temperature.
-26 degrees? Actually, it's -229.835 degrees Fahrenheit or -136.575 Celsius. Absolute zero is -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit and -273.15 Celsius. Divide either one by 2 to get the twice as cold answer.
It will be -2 degrees tomorrow. Twice as cold means subtracting the same temperature again, which in this case is 2 degrees.
100 degrees Celsius is more than twice as warm as 100 degrees Fahrenheit.
This would be a trick question, as temperature cannot be "twice as cold." Coldness is a lack of heat, so you would measure the difference in temperature in terms of degrees. If it's 0 degrees today and the weatherman says it will be twice as cold tomorrow, it would also be 0 degrees tomorrow.
Since 0 degrees Celsius equals 273 degrees Kelvin, then air that is twice as hot would be equal to 546 degrees Kelvin, which when converted back to Celsius is equal to 273 degrees Celsius. The natural urge is to double the Celsius temperature, let's say it was 5 degrees Celsius, then you'd probably want to double it to 10 degrees Celsius, however, that isn't correct. True temperature is measured in Kelvins, so you must convert to Kelvin to find out the true temperature conversion. Hope this answers the question.
It is exactly twice of 184 which is 368 degrees Fahrenheit.
If it is 0 degrees Celsius one day and it is twice as cold the next day, it would be -4 degrees Celsius the next day. This is because doubling the coldness of 0 degrees Celsius means subtracting 2 times 0 from the original temperature, resulting in -4 degrees Celsius.
Because Kelvin is an absolute scale while Celsius is not. If you think of heat as a measure of the thermal energy of molecules in a substance then 2K is twice as hot as 1K. 2 degrees Celsius is not twice as hot as 1 degree C.
Convert the temperature to Kelvin. Kelvin starts from absolute zero; so twice the temperature represents twice the internal energy. After doubling the temperature in Kelvin, you can convert back to Celsius if you like.
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.
No, tomorrow's temperature will not be twice as hot as today's. To calculate if it would be double, you would multiply today's temperature by 2, which would equal 28 degrees. Since tomorrow's temperature is expected to be 28 degrees, it is not double today's maximum temperature of 14 degrees.
well when i went to France (i live in england south west) it was around 26-32 degrees Celsius and i nearly fainted because of the heat! though I'm glad i went there cause it made me think twice about booking a hotel in Egypt where it was 41 degrees Celsius! 26 C = 78.8 F