the celsius on a thermonitor
microscope
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.
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit developed the scale which is named after him. See the related link. The zero reference point was the freezing point of salt water. The other reference point was 100° for human body temperature. The scale was revised slightly later, so that now, normal body temperature is considered 98.6°F.
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.
Luana Anders (May 12, 1938 - July 21, 1996) passed away from breast cancer .
yes even though he is 72, he is still a great scientist
The ancient Romans invented the circus, which we still have.
wheel
yes
Officially Celsius, though some people still think in Fahrenheit.
no, still normal
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