4750K
The prefixes "kilo-" and "mega-" are closest in size, as "kilo-" represents 1,000 (10^3) and "mega-" represents 1,000,000 (10^6). They are adjacent to each other on the International System of Units (SI) scale.
Nobody uses Rankine, so who knows (or cares) about that. However, 475 Kelvin is significantly hotter than from 15 degrees Celsius (it's well over the boiling point of water), and 59 F sounds about right for 15 C, so assuming it's not a trick question, 475 K is the odd man out.
No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.No. Temperature is measured in degrees. Temperature is just one element of weather. There are many other things that are measured, like wind speed and air pressure, which are measured in different units. It is all of these things combined that make up the weather.
Isotherms in thermal physics are the lines on a pressure versus volume graph for an ideal gas, where the pressure and volume are alowwed to vary but temperature is kept constant. They are the result of Isothermal expansions or contracions of ideal gasses.
Volume and pressure vary indirectly, which means that when one goes up, the other goes down. If the pressure goes up, the volume goes down. If the volume goes up, the pressure goes down.Mathematically:P1V1 = P2V2The left side represents the beginning conditions, and the right side represents the pressure and temperature that have changed. Note that this formula assumes constant mass and temperature.
Because Historical represents something that happened in history...
The difference between two temperatures is the numerical value that represents how much one temperature is larger or smaller than the other. To calculate the temperature difference, you subtract the lower temperature from the higher temperature.
The United States and Japan are two entirely different countries, and since that is the case, either country has different animals that represents each country. For instance, the Bald Eagle represents the United States, and the crane or the fish (or some other animal) represents Japan.
The boiling point. The process is condensation, but condensation and boiling occur at the same temperature since the boiling point represents the temperature at which gas and liquid are in equilibrium with each other.
Each integer is different from every other integer since it represents a different quantity. Actually, this is true of every number.
Temperature gradientPressure
Different. Even inside the torso itself, the temperature varies slightly. In the arms and legs, it can vary markedly.
moderate
The "K" in temperature represents the Kelvin scale. Unlike other temperature scales like Celsius and Fahrenheit, the Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, the coldest possible temperature where all molecular motion stops. This makes the Kelvin scale more scientifically accurate and easier to work with in scientific calculations.
There are two different ways to read a temperature, one is in Celsius and the other is in Fahrenheit. Hope that helps!
It may be the same temperature at ground level but the temperature (and behaviour) of the air column above you will be different.
Temperature changes when two systems or structures of different temperature touch each other. Heat goes from the hotter system to the cooler system.