0 degrees is cooler
0
50 degrees
it becomes denatured and inactive
No. If 273K represents 0 degrees Celsius, then 293K will be 20 degrees Celsius, which is lower than 100 degrees Celcius.
Celsius (or Centigrade)
Converting both to the same scale we'll see that 0 °F = -17.77 °C that makes 0 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than 0 degrees Celsius
0
Yes, it can go below 0 degrees to minus Celsius for cooler temperatures for example it was -4°c outside
Water takes liquid form between 0 and 100 degrees.
typically not, you need 80 to 100 degrees F preferrably
0 degrees Celsius is water's freezing point 100 degrees celcius is waters's boiling point
Water boils at 212°F or 100 degrees Celsius, and freezes at 32° F or 0 degrees Celsius.
Pure water !
50 degrees
Approx 100. As a rule of thumb, generally 20 degrees cooler in the shade or so they say.
At sea level atmospheric pressure, 0°C or 273.16 K.
Freezing = 0 degrees Celsius (0oC) Boiling = 100 degrees Celsius (100oC)It depends on the object you are talking about.The boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius, and its freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius.