Yes.
-40 degrees is the same in both Fahrenheit and Celsius.
Here's a simple Perl program to convert a given temperature from Celsius to Fahrenheit: # Input temperature in Celsius my $celsius = 20; # Convert Celsius to Fahrenheit my $fahrenheit = ($celsius * 9/5) + 32; # Print the result print "$celsius degrees Celsius is equal to $fahrenheit degrees Fahrenheit\n"; You can replace the value of $celsius with any temperature you want to convert.
Any time the Fahrenheit temperature is below (minus 40), the Celsius number for the same temperature is higher.
To convert centigrade to Fahrenheit, you can use the formula: F = (C x 9/5) + 32, where F is the temperature in Fahrenheit and C is the temperature in centigrade. Multiply the centigrade temperature by 9/5 and then add 32 to get the equivalent temperature in Fahrenheit.
Above -40 degrees, any number in Fahrenheit is colder than the same number in Celsius.
One Kelvin is exactly equal to one Celsius degree, and to 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees. At any temperature, the Celsius number is 273.15 less than the Kelvin number. Getting the Fahrenheit number is slightly more complicated than that.
No. 37° F is the same temperature as 2.7° C. 37° C is the same temperature as 98.6° F. For any number above -40, the Celsius is warmer than the Fahrenheit. For any number below -40, the Celsius is cooler than the Fahrenheit.
46 degrees Celsius is exactly equal to 114.8 degrees Fahrenheit. Nobody can tell the difference, because there isn't any.
Of course your can! You can convert any temperature from Celsius to Fahrenheit and vise versa. 37.4°C=99.32°F.
The "coldest" temperature that can be expressed on any temperature scale is absolute zero, the theoretical minimum temperature of matter. It is expressed on the Fahrenheit scale as - 459.67 °F (equal to -273.15 °C or 0 K). Any numerical values further below zero would be meaningless.
The temperature above freezing is any temperature above 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius).
-200 Celsius is extremely cold and well below freezing. It is equivalent to -328 Fahrenheit. At this temperature, most gases would be in liquid or solid state, and any living organism would not survive.
79 degrees Fahrenheit = 26.1 degrees Celsius Fahrenheit to Celsius = Deduct 32, then multiply by 5, then divide by 9 79 degrees Fahrenheit = 26.1 degrees Celsius Fahrenheit to Celsius = Deduct 32, then multiply by 5, then divide by 9