They become dormant (sleeping) and stop growing or grow very slowly as the conditions are not correct for them to grow or reproduce. They need warmth to do that. However, they are not killed either. Temperatures of over 63*C are needed to kill bacteria in food, but there are some types that are killed before this and some that can survive in extreme heat. These are more rare though and are not likely to exist in food, or anything that a normal human would regularly be in contact with.
the bacteria start to die and not grow
They multiply slowly.
die
27
shut up u pice of *&%*!
Minus 10 °F = Minus 23 °C
Montana holds the record at minus 70 degrees F on 20 January 1954 at Rogers Pass which has an elevation of 5,470 feet. That record is followed by: Peter's Sink Utah at minus 69 degrees F. Riverside Wyoming at minus 66 degrees F. Maybell Colorada at minus 61 degrees F. Idaho, Minnesota and North Dakota have all hit minus 60 degrees F.
The volume of gases decreases with temperature; extrapolating the volume/temperature relationship, it looked as if all gases would reach a volume of zero at approximately the same temperature, about minus 273 degrees centigrade.
25 degrees centigrade equal 77 degrees Fahrenheit.
-15ºC = 5.0ºF
-11.2 degrees Fahrenheit
Minus two degrees Centigrade is 28.4 degrees Fahrenheit
-40 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to -40 degrees Celsius.
-22 deg C = -7.6 deg F
Zero Kelvin (by definition), or about minus 273 degrees Centigrade.
Sperm bank.
-27 degrees Celsius = -16.6 degrees Fahrenheit
Use this equation to convert degrees Fahrenheit (ºF) to degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC): [°C] = ([°F] - 32) × 0.556Use this equation to convert degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC) to degrees Fahrenheit (ºF): [°F] = [°C] × 1.8 + 32
0
Temperatures drop in the Mesosphere because of the height of this layer of the atmosphere. At eighty kilometers temperatures reach a minus ninety degrees centigrade.