0 °C is equal to 32 °F or 273.15 Kelvin.
(it would also be equal to 491.67 Rankine)
32 degrees Fahrenheit or you could have 273.15 degrees Kelvin
If it's zero C, then that's (32 F) and also (273.15 K). If it's zero F, then that's (-17.77 C) and also (-255.37 K). If it's zero K, then that's (-273.15 C) and also (-459.7 F)
32 degrees Fahrenheit (or 0 degrees celsius) is the point of freezing.
-40.
212 degrees F
The freezing temperature of water is 0 degrees celsius or 32 degrees fahrenheit so it is colder than the freezing temperature of water.
No.The two temperature scales have different zero points. When Daniel Fahrenheit defined the zero temperature on his scale, it was for the freezing point of brine. His temperature for the freezing point of water was thus 32 degrees. When Anders Celsius created his thermometer scale, he used the freezing and boiling points of water, and divided the space between into 100 equal intervals.* So we have come to define 0 degrees Celsius as equal in temperature to 32 degrees Fahrenheit.* Celsius originally measured temperature inversely, with 0 for boiling and 100 for freezing, but not long afterward Carolus Linnaeus established the current version.
The Celsius scale.
Absolute Zero: 0 K (Kelvin) equals -273.15 °C (degrees Celsius) equals -459.67 °F (degrees Fahrenheit).
The temperature of 'absolute zero' equals -273.15 degrees Celsius 0 K = -273.15 °C
Yes, it is the freezing point of water at sea level and equals 212°F
32 degrees Fahrenheit (or 0 degrees celsius) is the point of freezing.
No.
32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 degrees Celsius.32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 (zero) degrees Celsius
-40.
55.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 degrees fahrenheit.
15 degrees Celsius = 59 degrees Fahrenheit.
0 equals Degrees Centigrade at which Water Freezes