In the Celsius scale (as well as in other currently used temperature scales), a larger number indicates a warmer temperature.
A 5˚ increase in Celsius is warmer than a 5˚ increase in Fahrenheit. 5˚ C is equivalent to 41˚F, or 5˚F is equivalent to -15˚C.
15 degrees Fahrenheit = -9.4 degrees Celsius.
-12
15 degrees C
-15 degrees Celsius = 5 degrees Fahrenheit
7 degrees Celsius is warmer than 3.5. The higher the number in degrees, the warmer it is!
I suggest you convert each of the Fahrenheit temperatures to Celsius (or the other way round, each of the Celsius temperatures to Fahrenheit), and then compare.
A 5˚ increase in Celsius is warmer than a 5˚ increase in Fahrenheit. 5˚ C is equivalent to 41˚F, or 5˚F is equivalent to -15˚C.
no, -3 is warmer than -15
-15 degree Celsius is colder than -3 degrees Celsius.
They are about the same because 60 degrees Fahrenheit is equivalent to 15.56 degrees Celsius
-3 Celsius is warmer.
265.15 degrees Kelvin is 15 degrees Celsius lower than seven degrees Celsius.
-15
This question begs the benefit of the doubt ... that it conflates two separate questions cleverly, rather than blindly. The answers to both are: 1). 15°C is the warmer temperature. 2). It exceeds the other one by 12°C.
5C is colder than 15C.
It gets cold in winter (November- March) about 1 degrees Celsius, sometimes less. Then at the moment (May) it's about 15 degrees Celsius. In summer (June-August), it doesn't usually get much warmer than 25 degrees Celsius