Celsius
1 degree Fahrenheit is -17.22 degrees Celsius. 1 degree Celsius is 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It seems that 1 degree Celsius is hotter.
100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees FahrenheitFor fresh water under atmospheric pressure, the boiling temperature is 100 Celsius or 212 Fahrenheit
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit. It freezes at 0 degrees Celsius Water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit. It boils at 100 degrees Celsius. So, one degree Celsius it roughly two degrees Fahrenheit.
A degree Celsius, although it has the same name, is equal to 1.8 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. You can see that for the freezing and boiling points of water, there are 100 Celsius degrees (100-0) between the two temperatures, while there are 180 (212-32) of the smaller fahrenheit degrees.
One Celsius
One Celsius degree is 1.8 times larger than one Fahrenheit degree.
The "scale" of each is infinitely big -- in other words, both have no maximum possible temperature. However, one degree Celsius (°C) is larger than one degree Fahrenheit (°F).
Sixty one degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius is sixteen point zero one Celsius. the formula to work these problems is to: Fahrenheit to Celsius= subtract 32, multiply by 5 and then divide by 9 Celsius to Fahrenheit multiply by 9, divide by 5 and add 32
One degree Fahrenheit is equal to -17.22222222222222...repeating degrees Celsius.
1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.2 degrees Celsius.
1 degree Celsius = 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit
212 Fahrenheit It is the boiling temperature of pure water under one atmospheric pressure