0 Celsius is lower than 0 Fahrenheit. 0°C is the freezing point of water, while 0°F is equivalent to -17.78°C.
-10 F is much colder than -10C.
F means "Fahrenheit". It is how we measure. Below F means below "Fahrenheit". C means "Celsius". That is not colder, it is just saying it is. Below Celsius is the same as Fahrenheit. Say it is 80 Degrees F, and 80 Degrees C. C is definitely is much much hotter. Because they have the same degrees does not mean they are the same. When they are the same degrees C is hotter all the time. Those are numbers, like 80/80. However, if it was 80 Degrees F and 20 degrees C; C is much much colder. I hope I explained it okay. Oh, if it is below that means below 0. That's also when there is a negative (-) sign on the number. -80 Below F and -80 Below C is like below, only C is colder. Weird how math is, huh?
17 degrees Fahrenheit is colder than 17 degrees Celsius. This is because the Fahrenheit scale has smaller degrees between each interval compared to the Celsius scale.
Water boils at 212°F (100°C) and freezes at 32°F (0°C).
0
They are the same F = 9/5 x C + 32
-3 degrees Fahrenheit is colder.
32 degrees Fahrenheit is colder than 5 degrees Celsius. 32°F is equivalent to 0°C, so it is actually colder.
0 Celsius is lower than 0 Fahrenheit. 0°C is the freezing point of water, while 0°F is equivalent to -17.78°C.
200 kelvin is much colder than 0 degrees F (200 kelvin = -99.67 F).
Water freezes at 32 oF or 0 oC. This is a good reference point. 5 oF must be lower than the freezing point of water but 5 oC is higher than the freezing point of water. Therefore, 5oF is colder.
0 degrees Kelvin is much colder. It is equal to -273.15 C
-40 F is equal to -40 C. Both temperatures represent the same point on the Fahrenheit and Celsius scales.
3 degrees Fahrenheit
200 Kelvin is colder - it is -99.67 F.
-100 degrees c is colder because it's below 0 degrees c. 600 derees c is above.