140°C = 284°F
A change of one degree Celsius indicates the same temperature change as a change of (B) one Kelvin. (Isn't it easier to say that Kelvins are the same size as Celsius degrees ?)
32 Degrees Fahrenheit is the Temperature at which Water Freezes.
32ºF = 0ºC
212 deg Fahrenheit at which water boils
Work is scalarWork W is both a scalar (F.D) and a vector (FxD), in short work is a Quaternion,W = [0,F][0,D]= [00 -F.D, 0D + F0 + FxD] = [-F.D, FxD] .Physics has yet to recognize that Work and Energy are Quaternions and thus define work and energy as a scalar. Nature and mathematics recognize work as as a Quaternion manifested by the reality of F.D and FxD.Work is a scalar when the angle between F and D is a multiple of even 90 degrees and a torque when the angle is an odd multiple of 90 degrees.
Temperature, equal to 77 degrees Fahrenheit.
33.3333333 degrees Celsius Tc = (5/9)*(Tf-32) <-- Plug in what you know and then do the math :D Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit
0 degrees Celsius is 32 degrees Fahrenheit
0 Degrees Centigrade/Celsius is 32 Degrees Fahrenheit
The Fahrenheit scale and Celsius scale are different one way by temperature limits. 1. On the Fahrenheit scale, water freezes at 32 degrees. On the Celsius scale, water freezes at 0 degrees. 2. On Fahrenheit scale, comfortable room temp. is 70-80 degrees. Celsius: 20-30 degrees. 3. Normal body temp: 98.6 degrees(fahrenheit) 37 degrees(celsius) 4.Highest recorded air temp: 136.5 degrees(fahrenheit) 58 degrees(celsius) 5. Water boils at 212 degrees(fahrenheit) 100 degrees(celcius) :D
0 Degrees Centigrade/Celsius equals 32 Degrees Fahrenheit
54 degrees Celsius is equal to 129.2 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 degrees Fahrenheit at which water freezes
c 25
Well the freezing point for water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius.
Start by taking the number in Celsius and multiply it by 9. Then divide that number by 5, and then add 32. This is how you convert Celsius to Fahrenheit or use the equation F = (9/5)C + 32In this case, the answer is about 97.52 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 degrees Fahrenheit at which water freezes