Chicken should be stored between 0oC, and 4oC. This is equivalent to 32oF - 39oF.
This is a question with answers that can only be opinions, but the general consenus should be Earth, as we all live on it. Edit by Dan: No, he/she means coolest by temperature in which case it is Neptune which can drop to a freezing cold temperature of -200 Degrees Celsius to -250 Degrees Celsius.
No, mercury does not become solid in hot temperature and liquid in coolest temperature. But mercury becomes gas or liquid in hot temperature and becomes solid in coolest temperature. Mercury becomes solid after freezing point of -38.72 degrees Celsius. Solid Mercury can become superconductor in reaching of its critical temperature 4.2 K. Mercury is liquid under the room temperature (25 degrees Celsius). Mercury becomes gas after boiling point of 357 degrees Celsius.
In Fahrenheit: 35 degrees below freezingIn Celsius, 3 degrees below freezing.(In both cases, we're using "freezing" to meanthe freezing temperature of water.)
-128 degrees Fahrenheit. (32F is freezing).
Freezing temp for Celsius = 0 degrees (32 degrees Fahrenheit)
In Fahrenheit the freezing temperature is 32 degrees. negative three degrees would be 35 degrees below freezing.
3,038 degrees Celsius ( 5,500 degrees Fahrenheit)
It is the freezing point of water and equivalent to 32 degrees fahrenheit it is freezing! In Fahrenheit, it is 32 degrees. It is also the freezing point of water in Celsius.
32 degrees Fahrenheit (or 0 degrees celsius) is the point of freezing.
20 degrees above freezing in Celsius is 50 degrees Fahrenheit
The freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
No. If your time is correct, the chicken should be OK. Either get it refrigerated right away or cook it up.