That is a wrong question, because all countries use degrees Celsius, except the USA. Even Great Britain stopped using degrees Fahrenheit and use now degrees Celsius.
Basically every single country except USA and its possessions and territories.
It's chilly, but still above the freezing point of water (i.e. above 32 degrees Fahrenheit).
The three states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas.Water at 50 degrees Celsius and standard pressure is a liquid.50 degrees Celsius is 32 + (9/5) times 50 = 122 degrees Fahrenheit. liquid liquid
Anders Celsius proposed this scale in 1742, defining 100 degrees as the boiling point of water and 0 degrees as the freezing point. This was reversed before his scale was actually put to use. The 100 degree difference led to the 'cent' prefix, indicating each division was 1/100 of the difference. Since 'centigrade' is a geometric measurement of angles in Spanish-speaking countries, it was sometimes called the Celsius scale but it was not until 1948 that this name was officially adopted by the scientific community.
As far as normal climate experiences go, 9 C is a pleasant cool day (with a wind it might be described as brisk). A light jacket would be adequate. Joggers would still be in shorts and t-shirts
The three temperature scales that are most commonly used are Fahrenheit, Celsius and Kelvin. Celsius and Kelvin are similar in the sense that both use the same gradient; C+1 = K+1. The difference is that 0 degrees Celsius is the freezing point of water, whereas 0 degrees Kelvin is absolute zero, or -273.15 degrees Celsius. Fahrenheit follows a different gradient from Celsius and Kelvin, and therefore requires a formula slightly more tricky than a simple addition or subtraction (F=C*9/5+32 to be precise). There is one more temperature Scale: Rankine. The Rankine is to Fahrenheit as Kelvin is to Celsius; 0 Rankine is absolute zero, but it follows the gradient of the Fahrenheit scale.
The world is using degees Celsius. Only the USA likes the degrees Fahrenheit.
What TEMPERATURE is 10 degrees lower than seven degrees celsius? The answer is negative 3 degrees. 7 - 7 = 0 (Still have 3 keft over) 0 - 3 = - 3 =) x
Water freezes solid at 0 degrees Celsius, so it will still be solid at -24 degrees Celsius.
no, still normal
Yes because 100 degrees Celsius is equal to 212 degrees Fahrenheit. If your not quite sure still, just google Fahrenheit to Celsius converter.
It's still 0 degrees Celsius. The bottle doesn't really insulate it
at 105 degreesCelsius,steam is still steam.at about 50,000 degrees Celsius,steam turns into plasma, the fourth state of matter.
Celsius is a measurement of temperature named after its initiator, Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius. He devised a temperature scale in which the freezing point of water was called zero degrees, its boiling point one hundred degrees. His temperature scale is standard in most countries of the world, with the USA most prominently still using Fahrenheit's temperature scale. Celsius is an adjective and a proper noun.
It is still ice at -4 oC.
No. The freezing point is 0.00 degrees Celsius. The Celsius scale's 100 degrees equals the boiling point of water at sea level. The Celsius scale has been replaced by the centigrade scale, but it is still common to say Celsius.
Everything would still be okay.
Solid still room temperature i think