Probably nothing, but this is an expensive experiment to conduct.
Diamond has the highest melting point of any mineral (3820 degrees Kelvin), which converts to 3,546.85 degrees Celsius.
(The Centigrade measurement has essentially be abandoned. According to Sizes.com: "The problem was that the ice point, the 'temperature of melting ice...at standard atmospheric pressure', which was used to define zero degrees on the centigrade scale, cannot be measured with enough precision.")
63ºF = 17.22ºC
15.5
it is equal to -175 degree centigrade.
That will vary from one plastic to another. Be more specific.
you got burned severely like how Michael Brewer got burned
yes. the centigrade and Celsius are equal. 1 degree Centigrade = 1 degree Celsius
There is no real difference. In scientific usage, "degree centigrade" is more common than "centigrade degree" since the typical abbreviation is, for example, 40oC instead of 40 Co.
A Fahrenheit degree is 5/9 the size of a centigrade degree.
Yes. 1 degree of Fahrenheit is 5/9 of a degree Celsius (centigrade)
The instrument you would use to measure temperature is a thermometer!!!!!
1 kelvin = -272.15 degrees centigrade.
15 degree centigrade
degrees celsius
No.
One centigrade degree = 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees One Fahrenheit degree = 0.5555 repeating centigrade degrees
195 joule..
Neither, -2 is less than 0 (aka lower)