A set F below middle C refers to the notes F3-G3-A3-Bb3-C4, which are all consecutive notes below middle C (C4).
When the temperature is below 32°F (0°C), water freezes and can take the form of ice or snow, depending on atmospheric conditions.
400°F is equal to 204.4°C.
76°F is approximately 24.4°C.
97.9°F = 36.6°C(97.9°F - 32) multiplied by 5/9 = 36.6°C
175°C is equal to 347°F.
I don't understand exactly which F you mean - but from one F to the next it is one octave.
F2 is the F 2 octaves below the F a forth above middle C. 2 refers to the second octave. Middle C is referred to as C4. The C below that is referred to as C3 and then the C below that is C2. To find F2 first find C2 and then go up to the F closest to it.
Soprano - Middle C to top A Alto - Bottom G to top E Tenor - bottom C (octave below middle C) to F above middle C Bass - bottom E to Middle C
In order, from lowest-pitched to highest-pitched, alto, mezzo-soprano, and soprano. The lowest note that an alto is expected to reach is F below middle C; a mezzo-soprano, A below middle C; and a soprano, middle C.
The range of notes in the bass clef octave typically spans from the F below middle C to the E above middle C.
By your vocal range. The alto part in choral music tends to range from the G below middle C to a "high F" (the F above the C above middle C). The soprano part tends to range from middle C to "high A." Whichever of these ranges you're most comfortable in will tell you what you are.
Some important notes below the treble clef include middle C, B, A, G, and F.
If you are in the treble clef (the curly one), then it would be the D above middle C. If you are in the bass clef (C shaped one), then it would be a the F, 1 and a bit below middle C!
Not quite. A standard oboe ranges from B flat below the treble staff, to high F above the treble staff. An A below middle C is half a tone lower than the oboes range.
The standard modern instrument has a range of three octaves, from the F below middle C.
The bass clef starts on the piano keyboard at the F note below middle C.
lowest pitch: 246 Hz- B3 (B below "middle C" on a piano) 349 Hz- F4 (F above "middle C") highest pitch: 880 Hz- A5 (A one octave above "middle C")