This question is actually more complicated than it sounds.
Water freezes at 0 degrees celcius. From 1° to 99° you'll have liquid water. So if the air temperature is 2° C you might expect liquid precipitation. But you might get a surprise when step out and see snow falling. Here's why. Precipitation falls through several thousand feet of air before you actually see it. If the air temp. near you is 2° C but the air from say above 1000 feet up to 9000 is -5° C you might get ice.
Water is a solid at -20 degrees Celsius
Water takes liquid form between 0 and 100 degrees.
Yes. cause 0 degrees celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit
3.8 x 10^5 Joules
Ok, this is based on equations 0 degrees Celsius is freezing and water will freeze at zero Celsius, but the time to freeze in direct relationship to volume so depending on your vehicle it would take anywhere to 4-6 hours at zero degrees Celsius. For every degree below 5:1 ratio -1 degrees Celsius the 2.5-4.75 hours to freeze. At -20 1 hour or less, to crack the block 2-3 hours. -40 degrees Celsius would take 22 min to freeze and to crack the block 1:10.
Water is a solid at -20 degrees Celsius
Water takes liquid form between 0 and 100 degrees.
Yes. cause 0 degrees celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit
15.37684 joules
Subtract the numbers: 5°C - 11°C = (5-11)°C = -6°C
Use this formula to convert degrees Fahrenheit (F) to degrees Celsius (C): (F - 32) / 1.8 = C
The answer is 20 times 75.
You can't freeze water at 17 degrees Celsius. The freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
115.2
3.8 x 10^5 Joules
To convert from degrees Fahrenheit to degrees Celsius, take the number, subtract 32, multiply by 5, and divide by 9. In this instance, 2 - 32 = -30 x 5 = -150 / 9 = -16.6 recurring Celsius (that is, -16.66666... Celsius).
Not coo at all very hot so if I was uu I would wear shorts and take a trip to the beach .