yes
160 degrees Fahrenheit.....because water boils at 100 degrees celsius so to be equivalent in temperature it would have to be 212 degrees Fahrenheit (where water boils).
At -40 they're the same. Neither is colder, they are scales of measurements for temperature. Those are two scales of temperature. Neither can be defined as being colder. One could say that Fahrenheit is the "colder" scale because -1 degree Fahrenheit is colder than -1 degree Celsius. The "coldest" scale I know of is Kelvin, which defines 0 degrees Kelvin as -273.15 degrees Celsius (Absolute Zero).
-16 Celsius is colder than -15 Celsius. The temperature scale is based on the freezing and boiling points of water, with 0 degrees Celsius being the freezing point and 100 degrees Celsius being the boiling point. Therefore, the closer the temperature is to 0 degrees Celsius, the colder it is.
Water at 0 degrees Celsius is in a solid state, known as ice.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure.
160 degrees Fahrenheit.....because water boils at 100 degrees celsius so to be equivalent in temperature it would have to be 212 degrees Fahrenheit (where water boils).
At -40 they're the same. Neither is colder, they are scales of measurements for temperature. Those are two scales of temperature. Neither can be defined as being colder. One could say that Fahrenheit is the "colder" scale because -1 degree Fahrenheit is colder than -1 degree Celsius. The "coldest" scale I know of is Kelvin, which defines 0 degrees Kelvin as -273.15 degrees Celsius (Absolute Zero).
0° celsius is 0° celsius, whether it's water, ice, dogfood, glass, stainless steel, or vodka.
55 degrees celsius
The boiling point of water is 100 degree celsius. Therefore water changes in to vapor after 100 degree celsius. Therefore the physical state of water at 250 degree celsius is "Gas".
water will become colder
The freezing temperature of water on the Celsius scale is 0 degrees. Five degrees colder than that would be -5 degrees Celsius.
-16 Celsius is colder than -15 Celsius. The temperature scale is based on the freezing and boiling points of water, with 0 degrees Celsius being the freezing point and 100 degrees Celsius being the boiling point. Therefore, the closer the temperature is to 0 degrees Celsius, the colder it is.
-4
Water at 0 degrees Celsius is in a solid state, known as ice.
0 degrees Celsius is a colder temperature than 40 degrees Celsius. 0 degrees Celsius is the freezing level for water. Any positive number above 0 degrees Celsius is a warmer temperature.
100 degrees celsius