32 degrees Fahrenheit
'Freezing Point' is an improper statement (i think), and the term 'Melting point' is more commonly used.
Everything has a different Freezing/Melting point, so I assume you mean the Freezing/Melting point of water? This is 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 273.15 Kelvin.
Zero degrees Celsius.
Or.
32 degrees Fahrenheit
32 degrees Fahrenheit is the freezing point of WATER. I ASSUME that's what you meant. ;)
Depends on what you are talking about, the freezing point of water is 0 Celsius (32F, 273.15 K) but other compounds will have different freezing points.
32 degrees Fahrenheit
fairly cold 0 degree Celsius = 32 degree Fahrenheit = freezing point for water 5 degree Celsius = 41 degree Fahrenheit
By comparative size, each "Celsius degree" represents 1.8 times as much change in temperature as a "Fahrenheit degree." However, the two scales cannot be directly compared because they have different beginning points: 0° Celsius is at the freezing point of water, while 0° Fahrenheit is the freezing point of brine (32 Fahrenheit degrees lower).
The temperature 1°C is warmer, above water's freezing point on the Celsius scale (0°C).The temperature 1°F is well below freezing on the Fahrenheit scale (32°F).The equivalent temperature to 1°F is -17.22°C.---The two temperature scales have different "starting points" - zero in Celsius is the freezing point of water, while zero in Fahrenheit is the fralty water). So 1° Celsius is above freezing while 1° Fahrenheit is below freezing, the freezing point of pure water being 0°C but 32° F.
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit divided boiling & freezing point of water exactly 180degrees apart. Every degree on Fahrenheit scale is 1/180th part of interval between freezing point and boiling point of water.
above it will be freezing at 32 degrees Fahrenheit
32 to zero
Freezing on the Fahrenheit scale is 32 degrees, so 1 degree F would be 31 degrees F below freezing.
Boiling points and melting points differ for different elements and compounds. However, if water is considered, the freezing point is 0 degree Celsius which is 32 degree Fahrenheit. Boiling point is 100 degree Celsius which is 212 degree Fahrenheit.
0C = 32F these are freezing points.
I think you mean the freezing point. The freezing point of water is 32 degree's Fahrenheit.
Yes, it is only one degree Fahrenheit above the freezing point of water.
A measurement of temperature. For example 32 degrees is freezing on the Fahrenheit scale.
0 degree Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
fairly cold 0 degree Celsius = 32 degree Fahrenheit = freezing point for water 5 degree Celsius = 41 degree Fahrenheit
130 degree Fahrenheit = 54.4444444 degree Celsius It is physically impossible for 130 degree Fahrenheit to freeze ANY water.
The two temperature scales have different "starting points" - zero in Celsius is the freezing point of water, while zero in Fahrenheit is the freezing point of brine (salty water). So 1° Celsius is above freezing while 1° Fahrenheit is below freezing, the freezing point of pure water being 0°C but 32° F *.A change of 1 degree Celsius is also a larger change than 1 degree Fahrenheit. Fahrenheit "degrees" are smaller than Celsius "degrees," as there are 180 of them between the freezing and boiling points of water (only 100 in Celsius).*For comparison a thermometer reading of 1° F is the same as -17.2° C
Diesel freezes at the temperature of -2 degrees FAHRENHEIT