Actually neither are official SI units — neither of the two “gallons”, imperial or US the units of length are organized in units of 1000, one metre is subdivided into 1000 milimetres and i kilometre is 1000 metres. A centimetre as 10 mm and one hundredth of a metre is related to SI units of length, but it is not SI. However it is useful when I’m doing woodwork which is more than I can for whatever “gallon”.
That would take some doing, since Celsius is not even a unit of volume. As a matter of fact, "Celsius" is not a unit of anything.
Kelvin. Taken to be numerically equal to one degree Celsius.
Yes kelvin is a si base unit. Kelvin is a fundamental unit of SI for thermodynamic temperature.
I assume you mean what is celsius the unit for? It is the unit of temperature.
The base unit for temperature is kelvin. In everyday use the common unit is degrees celsius. One degree celsius is the same size as one kelvin, 0oC is 273.15 K.
The smallest unit on the Celsius thermometer is 1 degree Celsius.
Kelvin, degrees Celsius, or degrees Fahrenheit.
Density is the quantity of matter present in a unit of volume. It is denoted by D. The SI unit for density is kg/m^3. The density of acetone vapour is 0.86 kg/m^3 at 98.5 degree Celsius.
The metric unit for measuring temperature is degrees Celsius (°C).
Celsius is the metric measurement for temperature.
Degree of Celsius The SI base unit for temperature is the kelvin. Kelvin are not degrees, however they are the same size as a degrees Celsius. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, The theoretically lowest temperature possibly, so the triple point of water ( zero degrees C) is 273.16K, the boiling point of water is 373.16K. Celsius tends to be used for everyday Temperatures.
The base unit for temperature is the kelvin. One degree celsius is the same as one kelvin, because kelvin starts at absolute zero, degrees celsius is kelvin plus 273.15. Celsius is used for most non-technical uses. Kelvin is just kelvin, not degrees kelvin.