Yes.
I really have no idea. Sorry I couldn't that much but one way I could help is by suggesting that you search Celsius on Wikipedia.com.....OK...um...good luck!!!!!!!!
Neither. German scientist Daniel Fahrenheit measured the temperature of the coldest concoction he could produce, and called that temperature 'zero'. The Swedish scientist Anders Celsius took the freezing point of water and called that'zero'.Mr. Fahrenheit's concoction was much colder than the freezing temperature of water, so his zero is much lower than Mr. Celsius' zero. That is why zero Celsius equals 32 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature measured is in reality of course the same , but in Fahrenheit's scale it is indicated by a higher number.
Celsius and Fahrenheit are two different temperature scales. A temperature reading in Celsius will be lower than in Fahrenheit because the Celsius scale sets the freezing point of water at 0 degrees and the boiling point at 100 degrees, while the Fahrenheit scale sets these points at 32 and 212 degrees, respectively.
Yes, a lower Celsius number indicates a colder temperature. The Celsius scale is based on the freezing and boiling points of water, where 0°C is the freezing point and 100°C is the boiling point. as the number decreases, the temperature decreases.
Yes, the more lower the temperature is, the more colder it is.
No, in Celsius temperature scale, lower temperatures are colder and higher temperatures are hotter.
I really have no idea. Sorry I couldn't that much but one way I could help is by suggesting that you search Celsius on Wikipedia.com.....OK...um...good luck!!!!!!!!
Shaft
In Fahrenheit, higher numbers represent hotter temperatures.
Neither. German scientist Daniel Fahrenheit measured the temperature of the coldest concoction he could produce, and called that temperature 'zero'. The Swedish scientist Anders Celsius took the freezing point of water and called that'zero'.Mr. Fahrenheit's concoction was much colder than the freezing temperature of water, so his zero is much lower than Mr. Celsius' zero. That is why zero Celsius equals 32 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature measured is in reality of course the same , but in Fahrenheit's scale it is indicated by a higher number.
Yes, -8 degrees Celsius is lower than -1 degree Celsius. The higher the negative value, the lower the temperature.
Celsius and Fahrenheit are two different temperature scales. A temperature reading in Celsius will be lower than in Fahrenheit because the Celsius scale sets the freezing point of water at 0 degrees and the boiling point at 100 degrees, while the Fahrenheit scale sets these points at 32 and 212 degrees, respectively.
That's correct. In the Fahrenheit and Celsius temperature scales, a given temperature in Fahrenheit will be higher than the equivalent temperature in Celsius. For example, 50 degrees Fahrenheit is a higher temperature than 10 degrees Celsius.
Yes, a lower Celsius number indicates a colder temperature. The Celsius scale is based on the freezing and boiling points of water, where 0°C is the freezing point and 100°C is the boiling point. as the number decreases, the temperature decreases.
the therminster will get hotter when the resistance is lowed
I do not know how you define, "higher", but 19 degrees, C is 9 degrees colder than 28 degrees, C.
When you go higher up it gets colder. Then the lower you go it gets hotter because the closer you are to the inner core the hotter it gets.