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Five degrees below zero on a Celsius scale is -5 degrees Celsius.
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No - 1 Celsius is 274 Kelvin. Zero degrees Kelvin (absolute zero) is -273 C
The freezing temperature of water on the Celsius scale is 0 degrees. Five degrees colder than that would be -5 degrees Celsius.
The measurement of how hot an object is and thus how much thermal energy an object has is called temperature. It is measured in oC, oF or K, which stand for degrees Celsius (often mistakenly called centigrade), degrees Fahrenheit and Kelvin. The Kelvin scale is the universal scale of temperature, and begins with zero at absolute zero, the temperature below which an object cannot fall as it then has no energy. The Celsius scale is exactly the same scale as Kelvin, but begins with zero at water's freezing point and 100 at its boiling point. Therefore, a measurement in Celsius is 273 below one at Kelvin (0oC = 273K). The Fahrenheit scale is a different scale to the other two. One degree Fahrenheit is five ninths the size of one degree celsius, and the freezing point of water is 32oF. oC = 9/5 x (oF - 32)
The Kelvin temperature scale (K) was developed by Lord Kelvin in the mid 1800s. The zero point of this scale is equivalent to -273.16 °C on the Celsius scale. This zero point is considered the lowest possible temperature of anything in the universe. Therefore, the Kelvin scale is also known as the "absolute temperature scale". At the freezing point of water, the temperature of the Kelvin scale reads 273 K. At the boiling point of water, it reads 373 K. Whereas the Kelvin scale is widely used by scientists, the Celsius or Fahrenheit scales are used in daily life. These two scales are easier to understand than the large numbers of the Kelvin scale. Could you imagine waking up to your radio and hearing the DJ give a weather report like this: "It's going to be a beautiful day today with sunny skies and a balmy temperature of 297 K!" That's 24 °C or 75 °F.
Start by taking the number in Fahrenheit and subtracting 32. Then divide the number by 9, and then multiply it by 5. This is how you convert Fahrenheit to Celsius or use the equation C = (F - 32) × 5/9In this case, the answer is about 1,371.11 degrees Celsius.
95 degrees Fahrenheit = 35 degrees Celsius.
five; they are: position, orientation, shape, and scale
The 'K' stands for kelvin. Kelvin is a thermodynamic temperature scale that measures absolute temperatures. In the kelvin system, 0 K is absolute zero -- the state at which all thermal energy stops. In the Kelvin scale, the boiling point of water is 373.1339 K Notice that it doesn't say "degrees kelvin". That's because the kelvin scale is not measured in the same way as Celsius or Fahrenheit. In both Celsius and Fahrenheit, there is a baseline of 0, and then the increments can go either positively or negatively based on that basic point. In the kelvin system, the baseline is absolute zero and can't get any lower and is therefore it is an absolute measure that can be manipulated algebraically. So, if you move to 5 K, that means you applied five times the amount of heat.