if it's winter not really, summer,Freezing!
1 degree Celsius plus 1 degree Celsius equals 2 degrees Celsius. Temperature reading is a linear scale, so you can add and subtract values directly in Celsius.
1 degree Fahrenheit is -17.22 degrees Celsius. 1 degree Celsius is 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It seems that 1 degree Celsius is hotter.
1 Kelvin "degree" is the same as a "degree" in Celsius. The two scales just have different starting points. So 1 Kelvin degree is the same temperature interval as 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees. (The actual temperature 1°K is equal to -272.15°C or -457.87°F )
1 degree Celsius equals a change of 9/5 = 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit and 1 degree Fahrenheit equals a change of 5/9 = 0.555555555 degrees Celsius.
"Cold" could mean anything. To me, cold might be 10 degrees Celsius, while someone else sees "cold" as 1 degree Celsius. In science, nothing is ever described as cold, because a questions that always arise are "how cold? 20 degrees Celsius? 0 degrees Celsius? -100 degrees Celsius?"
cold
cold
Hot, water on 100 degree Celsius is boiling
It is
17°
1 degree Celsius plus 1 degree Celsius equals 2 degrees Celsius. Temperature reading is a linear scale, so you can add and subtract values directly in Celsius.
yes. the centigrade and Celsius are equal. 1 degree Centigrade = 1 degree Celsius
1 degree Fahrenheit is -17.22 degrees Celsius. 1 degree Celsius is 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It seems that 1 degree Celsius is hotter.
The difference between 1 degree Celsius and 2 degrees Celsius is 1 degree Celsius.
1 Kelvin "degree" is the same as a "degree" in Celsius. The two scales just have different starting points. So 1 Kelvin degree is the same temperature interval as 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees. (The actual temperature 1°K is equal to -272.15°C or -457.87°F )
yes it is cold it is a negative degree
One degree Fahrenheit is equal to -17.22222222222222...repeating degrees Celsius.