milk :)
100.2 Fahrenheit is 37.89 Celsius
At -40 Celsius and Fahrenheit are the same temperature.
-5 degrees Celsius = 23 degrees Fahrenheit
-20 degrees Fahrenheit = -28.89 degrees Celsius
-23 degrees Celsius is -9.4 degrees Fahrenheit
zero
-26 degrees? Actually, it's -229.835 degrees Fahrenheit or -136.575 Celsius. Absolute zero is -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit and -273.15 Celsius. Divide either one by 2 to get the twice as cold answer.
100 degrees Celsius is more than twice as warm as 100 degrees Fahrenheit.
The question is the temperature at which F = 2C F = 32 + C x 1.8 Substitute for F = 2C 2C = 32 + 1.8 C 0.2 C = 32 C = 160 F = 32 + 160 x 1.8 = 32 + 288 = 320 Answer is: Celsius = 160 Fahrenheit = 320
1 degree Celsius is equal to 9/5 degrees Fahrenheit. Or it is easier to think that one degree Celsius is approximately two degrees Fahrenheit. So, if one has a thermometer that reads both Fahrenheit and Celsius, one would expect about twice the range of numbers on the Fahrenheit side, as well as potentially having more numbers marked on the scale.
400 Fahrenheit = 204.4 Celsius 400 Celsius = 752 Fahrenheit
Fahrenheit = (Celsius * 1.8) + 32 Celsius = (Fahrenheit - 32) / 1.8
(Celsius x 1.8)+32= Fahrenheit (Fahrenheit-32)/1.8= Celsius
It happens to be -40 Celsius too.
20 degrees Celsius = 68 degrees Fahrenheit 30 degrees Celsius = 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
Anders Celsius created the Celsius scale in 1742, and Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit developed the Fahrenheit scale in 1724.
101.5 degrees Fahrenheit = 38.61 degrees Celsius.