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Absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as -273.15° on the Celsius scale. This equates to -459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.
Absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as -273.15° on the Celsius scale. This equates to -459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.
Start by taking the number in Fahrenheit and subtracting 32. Then divide the number by 9, and then multiply it by 5. This is how you convert Fahrenheit to Celsius or use the equation C = (F - 32) × 5/9In this case, the answer is about -215 degrees Celsius.
There is no -45 Kelvin; absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as -273.15° on the Celsius scale. This equates to -459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.
Absolute zero is 0 degrees Kelvin, -273.15 degrees Celsius, and −459.67 degrees Fahrenheit. Short answer: No. Technically, absolute zero could be defined to be whatever number you wanted on some arbitrary scale. However, on the two commonly used scales - Fahrenheit & Celsius - 273.15 is not absolute zero. I'm guessing that you actually meant -273.15. On the Celsius scale, this is absolute zero (to 5 significant figures).
That is how the two temperature scales were defined.
Absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as -273.15° on the Celsius scale. This equates to -459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.
No.The two temperature scales have different zero points. When Daniel Fahrenheit defined the zero temperature on his scale, it was for the freezing point of brine. His temperature for the freezing point of water was thus 32 degrees. When Anders Celsius created his thermometer scale, he used the freezing and boiling points of water, and divided the space between into 100 equal intervals.* So we have come to define 0 degrees Celsius as equal in temperature to 32 degrees Fahrenheit.* Celsius originally measured temperature inversely, with 0 for boiling and 100 for freezing, but not long afterward Carolus Linnaeus established the current version.
This is the normal body temperature of a person, so it is not a fever. A fever has to be above 37 degrees Celsius or 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit to be considered a fever. A significant fever is defined as being 38.0 degrees Celsius or 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as -273.15° on the Celsius scale. This equates to -459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.
At -40 they're the same. Neither is colder, they are scales of measurements for temperature. Those are two scales of temperature. Neither can be defined as being colder. One could say that Fahrenheit is the "colder" scale because -1 degree Fahrenheit is colder than -1 degree Celsius. The "coldest" scale I know of is Kelvin, which defines 0 degrees Kelvin as -273.15 degrees Celsius (Absolute Zero).
Temperature is easy to convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius yourself. You can use the formula Tc = (5/9)*(Tf-32) where Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. 0 F is -18 C.
Fahrenheit is the temperature scale proposed in 1724 by, and named after, the physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686-1736). Within this scale, the freezing of water into ice is defined at 32 degrees, while the boiling point of water is defined to be 212 degrees. The Fahrenheit scale was replaced by the Celsius scale in most countries during the mid to late 20th century, though Canada retains it as a supplementary scale that can be used alongside Celsius.
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The temperature scale known as the Fahrenheit scale is named for Daniel Fahrenheit (1686-1736). Fahrenheit established a zero point (for freezing brine) and defined water's melting point (32°) and human body temperature (originally 60°). Later refinements by others altered the scale, setting body temperature near 98° and water's boiling point at 212°.Fahrenheit wrote of working with a similar scale devised by Ole Rømer (1644-1710).Only the US still uses the Fahrenheit scale to any great extent. The SI metric unit is the degree on the Celsius scale, which is different.
It is APPROXIMATELY zero degrees; that's how the scale was originally defined. The exact freezing temperature depends on pressure, impurities in the water, and even on the exact mix of isotopes.
Absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as -273.15° on the Celsius scale. This equates to -459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.