No because 0 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 32 degrees Fahrenheit
Degree Celsius is a measure of temperature, just like Fahrenheit. The only difference is that Celsius is used in different parts of the world, like South Africa, and Fahrenheit is used in places like America. There is also a difference between temperature in the two. freezing point in Celsius is 0 where as it is 32 in Fahrenheit. Boiling is 100 in Celsius where it is 212 in Fahrenheit
There is no such possible temperature value in Celsius or in Fahrenheit. Absolute zero (lowest measurable temperature) is -273.15°C / -459.67°F. (This is also zero on the Kelvin scale, 0 K or 0 kelvins)
ewan
It is difficult to get a large number of people accustomed to a new system. Also, Fahrenheit and Celsius are more convenient ranges of numbers for commonly encountered temperatures. For example, water freezes at 0o Celsius, but at 273.15o Kelvin.
99.9 degrees Celsius is equal to 211.82 degrees Fahrenheit. Also, here is the conversion equation for Celsius to Fahrenheit: 1. Multiply degrees Celsius by 9 2. Divide by 5 3. Add 32
Either Celsius or Fahrenheit, there should be a letter telling you which. C for Celsius and F for Fahrenheit.
Degree Celsius is a measure of temperature, just like Fahrenheit. The only difference is that Celsius is used in different parts of the world, like South Africa, and Fahrenheit is used in places like America. There is also a difference between temperature in the two. freezing point in Celsius is 0 where as it is 32 in Fahrenheit. Boiling is 100 in Celsius where it is 212 in Fahrenheit
No, the "degrees" have the same name but are different sizes. (Celsius degrees are larger intervals than Fahrenheit degrees.) A change of 1 degree Celsius is the same as a change of 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
The Celsius degree (which is also the Kelvin) is equal to 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees.
A "degree" on the Celsius scale is larger than a "degree" on the Fahrenheit scale. There are 100 equal intervals (degrees) between 0 °C and 100 °C, the freezing and boiling points of water. There are 180 equal intervals between those same temperatures on the Fahrenheit scale (32 °F and 212 °F). That makes each Celsius degree 1.8 times as large (wide) an interval as the Fahrenheit degree. This is the basis for the "9/5" an "5/9" fractions in the conversion formulas (9/5 = 1.8). Some conversion formulas omit the fractions in favor of multiplying or dividing by 1.8, which is a single step. (see related questions)
No.
Kelvin is an absolute temperature, whereas both Celsius and Fahrenheit (as well as others) do not have an absolute zero value. The advantage of the Celsius scale is that one Celsius degree is the same as one degree on the Kelvin scale. As a result temperature changes are the same whether measured in Kelvin or degrees C. Besides, nobody apart from the US uses Fahrenheit anyway. Oh, yes, also Burma and Liberia.
41 Fahrenheit, 278.15 Kelvin
1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.2222222 degrees Celsius
Fahrenheit is a temperature scale named after Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686-1736), a German physicist who proposed it in 1724. On this scale, the freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit (°F) and the boiling point 212 °F (at standard atmospheric pressure), placing the boiling and freezing points of water exactly 180 degrees apart. A degree on the Fahrenheit scale is 1/180th part of interval between the ice point and the steam point or the boiling point. On the Celsius scale, the freezing and boiling points of water are 100 degrees apart, hence the unit of this scale. A temperature interval of one degree Fahrenheit is an interval of 5⁄9 of a degree Celsius. The Fahrenheit and Celsius scales coincide at −40 degrees (i.e. −40 °F and −40 °C describe the same temperature).
Yes. This also equates to -459.67 Fahrenheit.
There are actually more than 3, but only 3 are widely used today:* Kelvin - the SI unit. Used mainly in science. * Celsius, also known as Centigrade: popularly used in most countries, outside the scientific community. * Fahrenheit: Used mainly in the United States.