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The lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale is -273.15 degrees Celsius. The lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale is 0 degrees Kelvin. Therefore the only temperature scale on which -460 degrees is possible is the Fahrenheit scale.
The "coldest" temperature that can be expressed on any temperature scale is absolute zero, the theoretical minimum temperature of matter. It is expressed on the Fahrenheit scale as - 459.67 °F (equal to -273.15 °C or 0 K). Any numerical values further below zero would be meaningless.
32 degrees fahrenheit.
32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 degrees Celsius.32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 (zero) degrees Celsius
32 degrees Fahrenheit (or 0 degrees celsius) is the point of freezing.
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)
The freezing temperature of water is 0 degrees celsius or 32 degrees fahrenheit so it is colder than the freezing temperature of water.
32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 degrees Celsius
If it's 0 degrees Celsius, it's 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
0 degrees Kelvin is absolute zero, the lowest possible temperature at which particles stop moving. It is equal to -273.15 degrees Celsius and -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit. At absolute zero, all molecular motion ceases.
No.
No because 0 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 32 degrees Fahrenheit