(-157) degrees Celsius = 116.15 kelvin
A+ . . . . 127k
Just add 273.15 to Celsius: [K] = [°C] + 273.15(-15) degrees Celsius = 258.15 kelvin
Minus 73 Celsius is 200 Kelvin. The Kelvin scale starts at minus 273 degrees approximately.
It is an absolute measurement scale of temperature. 0K is absolute zero there are no negative units on the scale (degrees centigrade [celsius] + 273 = degrees Kelvin). This also is the case on the Rankine temperature scale (degrees fahrenheit +459.69 = degrees Rankine)
This is a positive temperature on the Celsius scale and negative on the other scales.
The Kelvin scale is an absolute temperature scale that starts at absolute zero, the point at which all molecular motion ceases. Since there are no negative temperatures in the Kelvin scale, it is not expressed in degrees. On the other hand, the Celsius scale is relative to the freezing and boiling points of water, hence it is expressed in degrees.
It is Absolute Zero. On the Kelvin scale there are no negative numbers...so therefore absolute zero on the kelvin scale is zero. All we might add is that absolute zero is --273.15 degrees C.
Degrees in Kelvin scale = Degrees in Celsius scale + 273,15.
0 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 273.15 Kelvin on the Kelvin scale.
The Kelvin scale is basically the Celsius scale +273. To convert any Celsius measurement to Kelvin, you simply add 273. 30 degrees Celsius = 303 degrees Kelvin.
The Kelvin scale is based at absolute zero. The Kelvin scale was defined when the scientist William Thomson (1st Baron Kelvin) calculated the absolute minimum thermal energy an object can have. He decided to shift the Celsius scale so that 0 would be equivalent to having zero thermal energy (aka absolute zero).