-459.67 F
The lowest possible temperature on the Fahrenheit scale is -459.67°F, which is known as absolute zero. At this temperature, molecular motion ceases, and all matter theoretically reaches its lowest possible energy state.
The lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale is -273.15 degrees Celsius. The lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale is 0 degrees Kelvin. Therefore the only temperature scale on which -460 degrees is possible is the Fahrenheit scale.
The lowest possible temperature is 0 kelvin = -273.15 Celsius = -459.67 Fahrenheit This temperature is called "absolute zero." Never happened, theoretically, it is when there is no vibration in atoms. The coldest temperature ever to happen on earth was negative 129 Fahrenheit in Antarctica.
861.8 Fahrenheit
-9 Fahrenheit.
Zero Kelvin is equal to -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature is referred to as absolute zero and represents the lowest possible temperature.
Neither. The lowest is -459.67 deg F.
The equivalent of absolute zero in degrees Fahrenheit is -459.67°F. At this temperature, molecular activity ceases completely, making it the lowest possible temperature in the Fahrenheit scale.
The lowest temperature shown on a standard Fahrenheit thermometer is typically -40°F.
Absolute zero is 0 K, -273.15 C and -459.67 F
The "coldest" temperature that can be expressed on any temperature scale is absolute zero, the theoretical minimum temperature of matter. It is expressed on the Fahrenheit scale as - 459.67 °F (equal to -273.15 °C or 0 K). Any numerical values further below zero would be meaningless.
-366 F