8 degrees
The drop is 25 degrees.
1
The temperature drop across the coil is dependent on the relative humidity of the air, the wet bulb reading of the R/A, and the ambient temperature of the home. But a good rule of thumb is in between 17 and 22 degrees Fahrenheit.
The volume of a drop can vary depending on the liquid in question. Surface tension, the speed the drop is excreted and temperature will all subtly affect volume. However the average volume is usually 40 to 50 micro litres per drop.
In pharmacy, 1 milliliter is equal to 15 drops. The abbreviation for "drop" is "gtt".
Mercury, the closest planet to the sun, fluctuates in temperature more than any other planet. During the day, its temperature can reach 800 degrees Fahrenheit (430 degrees Celsius), and during the night, its temperature can drop to -280 degrees Fahrenheit (-170 degrees Celsius). This is a drop of about 1,080 degrees Fahrenheit (600 degrees Celsius).
The answer is 0
77 degrees Celsius for the normal time and can drop down to 14 degrees Celsius
The temperature in Russia is 7 degrees Celsius. Depending on the region, winters can drop below -65 degrees Celsius.
Still 54 degrees if the 18 degree drop is inside!
BECAUSE THE COLD FRONT AND THE WARM FRONT MEET AND CAUSES THE TEMPURTURE TO DROP.
It will gradually drop to below 10 degrees.
If the temperature is 44F and the temperature drops 20 degrees, the temperature would be 24. Subtract the temperature drop from the starting temperature.
Thermospere
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.
If you graph the change in temperature of water as it changes from a liquid to a solid, the line drops pretty quickly until the phase change starts at 0 degrees Celsius. The line then remains flat at 0 degrees Celsius and doesn't change until it is completely a solid. Then the temperature of the ice can continue to drop below zero.
Yes. Temperatures cool at a rate about 6.5 Celsius degrees per kilometer of altitude. This is straight from a 6th grade book.