-273.15 Celsius or -459.67 Fahrenheit.
Absolute zero or zero degrees kelvin is equal to -273.16 degrees Celsius.
No. Absolute zero is -273 degrees celsius. A reading of zero celsius is the freezing point of water.
Absolute zero is -273.15 °C (minus 273.15 degrees Celsius).Absolute zero in temperature refer to 0 Kelvin which is equal to -273.15'C.negative 273.15
The Kelvin and Celsius scales of temperature cannot meet, as they have the same size degrees but different zero points. Absolute Zero is 0° Kelvin, and equal to -273.15 °C , so the temperatures in Kelvin will always be 273.15 degrees larger than the same temperatures expressed in Celsius.
Absolute zero is the lowest number on the Kelvin scale. It can be converted to Celsius and Fahrenheit.
There is only one temperature for absolute zero, but it can have different numbers in different scales, for example 0 kelvin, or -273.15 degrees Celsius.
Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.Kelvin is defined in such a way that absolute zero is zero Kelvin.
Celsius and Kelvin scales have the same unit, but they start at different temperatures. 0 Celsius is the freezing pt of water, but 0 Kelvin is absolute zero (the coldest temperature possible)
No, 0 degrees Celsius is freezing temperature. You can go into the negatives.
It isn't. "Absolute zero" is zero on the Kelvin scale, 273.15 degrees colder than zero Celsius.
Absolute zero Celsius is the lowest temperature possible on the Celsius scale, at which point particles have minimal energy and movement ceases. It is equivalent to -273.15 degrees Celsius.
The Kelvin scale is based on absolute zero, the temperature at which all molecular motion ceases. Absolute zero is defined as 0 Kelvin (0 K), which is equal to -273.15 degrees Celsius. On the Kelvin scale, temperatures are always positive and directly proportional to the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance.