20 degrees centigrade.
10 degrees.
+10 degrees.
NO10 degrees Celsius is cold the lower it gets the colder it is and the higher it is the warmer it is
-10 C = 32 + -10 x 9/5 = 32 - 18 = 14 F greater than 10 F
Yes, 10°F=-12°C 20°C=68°F 10 degree Fahrenheit is colder than 20 degree Celsius. 10oF =-12.22oC which is less than 20oC .
A range of 20 degrees
10 degrees.
20 degrees Fahrenheit - 30 degrees Fahrenheit = -10 degrees Fahrenheit
The "north" and "south" latitude references begin at the equator. So "20 degrees" north or south are both 20 degrees from the equator, and "10 degrees" north or south are both 10 degrees from the equator. 10 is closer to the equator than 20.
+10 degrees.
At day we have 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) and at night we have 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit). The temperature difference between day and night is 10 degrees Celsius or 18 degrees Fahrenheit.
First, we need the "transit altitude" of the celestial equator, at 80 degrees north. That's 90 - 80 degrees = 10 degrees. At noon (local apparent noon) the Sun's altitude will be: 10 degrees + the Sun's declination. That's the altitude of the Sun's "upper culmination". At "midnight" (the Sun's "lower culmination") the Sun's altitude will be: the Sun's declination - 10 degrees. So, the difference in altitude is 20 degrees. The Sun is 20 degrees higher at noon.
It is 3 degrees.
-10
Assuming you mean 10 °C higher... 3 °C (or +3 °C) is 10° higher than -7 °C
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