Scientists DO have a measurement of temperature of objects which makes the question irrelevant.
temperature like degree Celsius
they wouldnt
Celsius is a type of temperature measurement like the Fahrenheit temperature system.
Some people object to cloning because it allows scientists to "act like God" in the manipulation of living organisms.
No. Temperature is a measure of heat, heat is the actual kinetic energy inside an object. Just like a road is not a foot, water is not a gallon. A saying attributed to the philosophy (or lack) of Zen Buddhism describe it well: 'mistake not the finger pointing for the moon.'No. Heat is the energy stored inside something. Temperature is a measurement of how hot or cold something is. An object's temperature doesn't tell us how much heat energy it has. ~Explainthatstuff~yes.
metric. its not want Americans normally use like feet and inches, its meters and centimeters
Namby-pamby scientists like biologists probably mostly use Celsius, but real scientists use Kelvin.
A table - just like any other object - will tend to acquire the temperature of its surroundings.
Just like other object, a piece of plutonium, too, will tend to have the same temperature as its surroundings. If, for example, on a warm day the temperature is 30 degrees, then the piece of plutonium - or any other object - will eventually have this temperature.
an external indicator is a device that indicates something like temperature measurement which can be used outside / externally
It is the coldest temperature. Nothing is colder than absolute zero. Scientists do know what happens in absolute zero because to get it to absolute zero, they have to put the object in something colder. But like mentioned above, nothing is colder than absolute zero. It is pretty much the end of the thermometer.
It is the coldest temperature. Nothing is colder than absolute zero. Scientists do know what happens in absolute zero because to get it to absolute zero, they have to put the object in something colder. But like mentioned above, nothing is colder than absolute zero. It is pretty much the end of the thermometer.