temperature is measured in degrees celsius or Fahrenheit
No, Fahrenheit is the Imperial Unit for temperature, not heat. Heat is energy in transit and is measured in joules (in the SI sytem).
The word "heat" as used in physics refers to heat energy, so it is logically measured in units of energy. The international unit for energy is the joule. Heat energy is sometimes still measured in the old-fashioned unit "calorie" instead.
Celsius is a unit of temperature. It is measured with a thermometer. It normally takes a capital/upper case letter as it is someone's name.
No.* Mass is measured in kilograms. * Volume is measured in cubic meters (which is not a base unit, but a derived unit).
Energy - of whatever kind - is measured in Joules. Power (energy per time unit) is measured in Watts.
Temperature is measured in Celsius (Centigrade), Fahrenheit, and Kelvin.
Kelvin is a unit of temperature.
The SI base unit for temperature is the kelvin.
Temperature is measured in degrees Celsius (oC), Fahrenheit (oF) or Kelvin (oK) * * * * * Degree Fahrenheit is not an SI unit for measuring temperature.
Enthalpy is the measurement of heat, Joule (J) is the unit. Temperature is not a measurement of heat. Temperature has the unit Kelvin (K) or Celsius (oC)
energy -- temperature US NBA team -- wins and losses
In the SI kelvin is the unit for temperature.
In the scientific community, temperature is measured in kelvins, which are intervals of temperature on the Kelvin (absolute) temperature scale. More widely and popularly, temperature is measured in degrees Celsius (centigrade) or degrees Fahrenheit, which confusingly are not the same-sized intervals.
No, Fahrenheit is the Imperial Unit for temperature, not heat. Heat is energy in transit and is measured in joules (in the SI sytem).
No - a kilometre is a unit of distance. Temperature is measured in Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin, or Réaumur.
Thermometer is used to measure temperature. it is measured in celsius, kelvin etc.
Heat intensity (how Hot is it) is measured by the objects Temperature in Degrees, Fahrenheit, Centigrade, or Kelvin. Heat content (energy) is most commonly measured in Calories.