Assuming the question refers to Celsius, it is named after the 18th Century Swedish scientist who developed a similar temperature scale.
Celsius is capitalized because it's named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius who developed the Celsius temperature scale. It's a proper noun that refers to specific unit of measurement.
Because it is a person's name, as is Fahrenheit.
They are proper nouns, derived from their inventors' last names.
160°F is equal to 71°C in Celsius.
You do not get anything. The Celsius scale is an interval scale, not a ratio scale and so it is not additive.
The temperature "thirty degrees Celsius" is written as 30°C
36.33 C
599.85 C
The capital "C" in Celsius is used to honor the Swedish scientist Anders Celsius who developed the temperature scale. It helps differentiate between the Celsius temperature scale and the unrelated temperature scale, Fahrenheit.
The symbol for Celsius is °C.
Metric. And it is Celsius (with a capital C) because it is named after Anders Celsius.
Yes, "Celsius" is capitalized when referring to the temperature scale named after Anders Celsius.
23° Celsius - 25° Celsius (77°F) = -2° Celsius The automatic changing of capital letters to small letters is no good idea! 23°c - 25°c (77°f) = -2°c.
A superscript 0 (zero) and a capital "C". 0C
3 degrees Celsius would be written as 3 oC with the degrees sign and a capital letter C.
Celsius is measured using a thermometer that is calibrated in degrees Celsius. The scale is typically based on the freezing and boiling points of water, which are 0°C and 100°C, respectively. Temperatures are recorded in Celsius with the symbol "°C".
The capital of Canada is Ottawa.
18 Celsius
-273.15 is the absolute zero on the Celsius scale.
16 C