beauce it aint your business
Centigrade degrees or the "Celsius" scale.
No, Celsius is a unit of temperature measurement on the Celsius scale. It is not the opposite of temperature, but a way to quantify it.
It is equivalent to 100 degrees Celsius
35 degrees... Celsius and Centigrade are two different names for the same temperature scale.
You do not get anything. The Celsius scale is an interval scale, not a ratio scale and so it is not additive.
Always use temperature in the Kelvin scale when doing gas law problems.
If you mean the temperature of boiling water then Celsius or Centigrade scale
The Celsius scale is also known as the Centigrade scale.
Centigrade degrees or the "Celsius" scale.
The Celsius scale, of course. Though it is also known as the centigrade scale.
Anders Celsius, a Swedish astronomer, created his temperature scale in 1742.
50 degrees is hotter on the Celsius scale, as 50 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 122 degrees Fahrenheit.
Andres Celsius developed a similar temperature scale that was the reverse of modern scale. The Celsius scale was named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius(1701-1744). Swedish biologist, Linnaeus developed our modern Celsius scale and named it after Anders Celsius.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius on the Celsius temperature scale.
The lowest temperature (absolute zero) on the Celsius scale is -273.15°
Celsius invented the celsius scale for temperature.
The Celsius scale was invented in 1742 by Anders Celsius.