Want this question answered?
At -40 on both scales.
208 °F
Numerical value and direction
Because velocity has a direction but speed does not. A vector has both a numerical value and a direction but a speed has only a numerical value and therefore it can't be represented by a vector.
1 (one).
The temperature - 40 °C is equal to -40 °F. This is the only temperature at which the two scales (Celsius and Fahrenheit) have the same numerical value.
At any point in the Celsius scale, the difference between degrees Celsius and degrees Kelvin is 273.15. At no point do the two scales cross.
fluorine has the highest electronegativity value (3.98)
The numerical value in Celsius can be converted by multiplying it with 1.8 and than adding 32 to Fahrenheit and -40is the temperatre at which temperature in degree centrigrade becomes numerically equal to degree Fahrenheit.
The numerical value of the temperature increases.
The temperature that has the same numerical value in Kelvin and Celsius is -273.15 degrees. At this temperature, known as absolute zero, there is no molecular movement, and it is the lowest possible temperature.
numerical value for 500689 numerical value for 500689 numerical value for 500689
At -40 on both scales.
It is infinite as is the highest whole number because 0 -1 -2 -3 are integers in their own right as used on temperature scales or values given on the Cartesian plane.
The numerical value of -55 is?
It's - 40 degrees.
5000 is a numerical value.