Celsius and Kelvins are the two scales that scientists use to measure temperature and the official SI unit for temperature is Celsius.
Celsius and Kelvins are the two scales that scientists use to measure temperature and the official SI unit for temperature is Celsius.
Celsius and Kelvins are the two scales that scientists use to measure temperature and the official SI unit for temperature is Celsius.
Celsius and Kelvins are the two scales that scientists use to measure temperature and the official SI unit for temperature is Celsius.
They are similar in so far as they are measurement scales, but that is about it! Centimetre is a unit in the International Standard system: neither Fahrenheit not Celsius are, a centimetre is an absolute unit: neither Fahrenheit not Celsius are.
A chicken egg has approximately that mass. Note: A gram is a unit of mass; not a unit of weight.
The unit used on spring scales is 'Newtons.'
some scales, a newtonmeter maybe...
Spring scales can measure grams, newtons, or pounds.
There are many scales of temperature. For example, you may be interested in the Kelvin scale, and the Réaumur scale. There are more, as well. The purest measure of temperature is in joules, the same unit as energy, though often it is scaled to a different energy unit for convenience: the electron-volt.
Spring scales can be calibrated in any desired unit of force. Some examples are: -- newton -- ounce -- pound -- ton -- stone
Richter scales are used to measure the magnitude of an earthquake. There is no specific unit used for earthquakes. I hope this helps. =)