- 40 has the same scale mark for both systems.
-40 degrees
Yes, they both measure temperature.
i dont know! sorry
The temperature of the boiling point of water is the same, whatever scale you use to measure it - they are all equally hot.
0 degrees Celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Celsius and Fahrenheit have the same temperature at -40 degrees, as it is the point where the two temperature scales intersect. Below -40 degrees, the Celsius temperature is lower than its Fahrenheit equivalent.
(1749 degrees Celsius, 3180 degrees Fahrenheit)
No. Zero degrees Celsius is equivalent to 32 degrees Fahrenheit. It is the freezing point of water.
They are two different scales, with the increments in Fahrenheit smaller than those in celcius. Because of this there is one crossover point where they are the same, -40.
Only in that both are used to measure temperature.
Celsius and Fahrenheit are two different temperature scales. A temperature reading in Celsius will be lower than in Fahrenheit because the Celsius scale sets the freezing point of water at 0 degrees and the boiling point at 100 degrees, while the Fahrenheit scale sets these points at 32 and 212 degrees, respectively.
It is the equivalent of 32 degrees Fahrenheit