175 F = (175 - 32) x (5/9) C
0 Degrees Celsius is -273.15 Kelvin so add your Degrees Celsius to the -273.15 to get your answer in Kelvin or subtract if its a negative temperature.
If your room temperature is 70 C then stearic acid would be in a liquid form as its melting point is 69.6 C. For the rest of us humans with a room temperature of around 24 C stearic acid is solid
It depends on where the mine is, and how deep it is. In most of the US, the year-round temperature a few dozen feet underground is somewhere in the vicinity of 55 degrees (Fahrenheit)... colder in the north, warmer in the south, ask a local caver if you want to know what it is in your area specifically. The deeper you go, the warmer it gets. Very roughly speaking, every 30 feet deeper means about a 1 degree rise in temperature... this isn't true in all mines, it depends on the local geology, but that's a pretty good rule of thumb.
2.5 g 1 mol/18.02 g (-285.83) kJ/mol
That depends on the composition of the penny. US pennies made before 1982 are mostly copper, and thus melt at a temperature of about 1981 °F. Pennies made after 1982 are mostly zinc, and will melt at about 787 °F.
37.78 degrees Celsius.
75.5 degrees Celsius = 167.9 degrees Fahrenheit.
Kelvin, Celsius, Fahrenheit are common temperature scales. Celsius and Fahrenheit are measured in degrees.
No. In the United States of America, you measure in degrees Fahrenheit.
France uses the Celsius scale and the US uses the Fahrenheit scale. Tc = (5/9)*(Tf-32); Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. For example, suppose you have a Fahrenheit temperature of 98.6 degrees and you wanted to convert it into degrees on the Celsius scale. Using the above formula, you would first subtract 32 from the Fahrenheit temperature and get 66.6 as a result. Then you multiply 66.6 by five-ninths and get the converted value of 37 degrees Celsius. Below is the formula to convert a Celsius scale temperature into degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. Tf = (9/5)*Tc+32; Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. Assume that you have a Celsius scale temperature of 100 degrees and you wish to convert it into degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. Using the stated formula, you first multiply the Celsius scale temperature reading by nine-fifths and get a result of 180. Then add 32 to 180 and get the final converted result of 212 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale.
Fahrenheit
Canada uses Celsius degrees, whereas the US uses Fahrenheit degrees. Therefore the degrees would have to be converted before they could be used.
The question doesn't tell us what scale the 38.5 degrees comes from.If it's 38.5 Kelvin, then it converts to (minus 234.65) degrees Celsius.It it's 38.5 degrees Rankine, then it converts to (minus 251.76) degrees Celsius.If It's 38.5 degrees Fahrenheit, then it converts to 3.61 degrees Celsius.========================================Wait, wait ! If we read the question extra-carefully, it looks like the 38.5 is Celsius ... the question wants it converted to something else, but it doesn't say to what.OK. 38.5 degrees Celsius converts to:-234.65 Kelvin-358.37 Rankine101.3 FahrenheitSeeing this, I just now realized that this may be a body-temperature measurement of a sick person. If so, I apologize for playing around and taking so much time to give you the Fahrenheit equivalent. Yes, the patient's temperature is elevated, and a doctor should be consulted.
Japan uses Celsius.
In the US, temperatures are typically reported in Fahrenheit
Scientific comparisons are done in Celsius, but outdoor readings are still announced, (and body temperatures still recorded) as temperatures on the Fahrenheit scale.
The units or measurement of temperature are in degrees. You can measure degrees in either Fahrenheit, Celsius, or Kelvin.In the US we measure in Fahrenheit degrees. In the metric system, you also use Celsius degrees. However, the SI unit of temperature is called the kelvin. It depends on where you are and what kind of temperatures you are measuring.oC,oF and K (statements of Kelvin temperatures do NOT use the degree mark)