No. The lowest possible temperature is absolute zero, -273.15 degrees Celsius.
No, 0 degrees Celsius is freezing temperature. You can go into the negatives.
57.2°F is equal to 14°C The conversion formula is Celsius temperature = 5/9 x (Fahrenheit temperature - 32)
That would be 572 degrees Fahrenheit.300 degrees Celsius is 572 degrees Fahrenheit.It's easy to convert from Celsius to Fahrenheit by yourself. Tf = (9/5)*Tc+32, where Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. 300 C is 572 F.
The temperature of the body is usually from 36.7 to 37.9 degrees celsius
300 degees C --- That's not even its curie temperature. Not only will it still be solid, it will still be a magnet.
The temperature of the Exosphere ranges from 300 degrees Celsius to 1700 degrees Celsius.
it ranges from 300 to 1700 Celsius
Minus 273 degrees Celsius is the coldest possible temperature, a.k.a. "absolute zero".
No, 0 degrees Celsius is freezing temperature. You can go into the negatives.
300 Celsius equals 572 degrees F
-273.15 celsius is the absolute zero temperature. at that temperature atomic motion stops so
300-450 degrees Celsius
Yes.
heat will flow from the iron to the water until both are the same temperature
The coldest possible temperature on the Celsius scale is -273.15 degrees.
373.15 degrees celsius.
57.2°F is equal to 14°C The conversion formula is Celsius temperature = 5/9 x (Fahrenheit temperature - 32)