0 degrees..exspect to be cold
The Kelvin scale of temperature is an absolute universale scale in SI; 0 kelvin is equal to -273,15 0C.
The Kelvin scale is an absolute temperature scale; 0 K corresponds to a thermodynamic temperature of absolute zero.
Kelvin, that's why on the Kelvin temperature scale absolute zero is 0 Kelvin and 0 degrees centigrade is 273 Kelvin.
Both Kelvin and Rankine are absolute temperature scales (The bottom of the scale is absolute 0 meaning there is no lower temperature). Rankine is used more by engineers and Kelvin by scientists
The lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale is -273.15 degrees Celsius. The lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale is 0 degrees Kelvin. Therefore the only temperature scale on which -460 degrees is possible is the Fahrenheit scale.
Kelvin
Add 273.15
Kelvin temperature scale uses absolute zero as the zero. Though you can find absolute zero in all temperature scales i.e. −459.67 degrees Fahrenheit and -273.15 degrees Celsius. But Kelvin is the scale that absolute zero is 0.
On the Kelvin scale, 0 is absolute zero, which is the theoretical temperature at which all atomic motion stops. This is not a possible temperature to reach, not even in deep space. There is no "below zero" on the Kelvin scale. Water melts at 273 Kelvin, and boils at 373 Kelvin.
It isn't. Kelvin is a measurement of temperature on an absolute scale (0 Kelvin is the lowest possible temperature, 0 Celsius is about 273 Kelvin). The Earth's core temperature is about 5778 Kelvin around the same as the surface of the sun, so says Wikipedia
The SI system uses the Kelvin temperature scale, which begins at 0° (at absolute zero) and uses the same degree size as the Celsius or centigrade scale. Water freezes at 273.15 °K, which is the equivalent of 0° Celsius. There are no negative temperatures on the Kelvin scale, as it is based on absolute zero and no lower temperature state can exist.
Kelvin. Both Celsius and Kelvin are measurements of temperature in the metric system, and both have the same size of degree. The only difference between them is that Kelvin has been shifted down the scale so that 0 degrees Kelvin is absolute zero, the coldest possible temperature.