when bacteria is in temperatures below 5 degrees it starts to die of, that's why people store food in fridges.
Some bacteria have anti-freeze in them, but most cells will freeze up and burst because ice is less dense than water. Some bacteria have anti-freeze in them, but most cells will freeze up and burst because ice is less dense than water.
It just gets colder. Nothing special. Remember -40 C = -40 F.
18 degrees Fahrenheit is below the freezing point of water (quite cold) and 18 degrees Celsius is a comfortable temperature. In cases like these where you are comparing temperatures on two different scales, it is better to convert them to one scale. The differences would be more obvious.
On the Cecilius scale water freezes at 0 degrees at STP. Therefore below the surface of a boy of WATER on Earth, the temperatures will always be positive.
It's 119.3 degrees Fahrenheit. See the Related Link below for a Fahrenheit/Celsius converter.
35°C = 95°F 35°F = 2°C 35° Fahrenheit is much cooler. * * * * * F is cooler for temperatures down to minus 40 degrees (C or F). Below that the Celsius temp is colder.
Celsius is a scale of temperature. Its range includes both positive and negative numbers.
Everything.
Yes, it can go below 0 degrees to minus Celsius for cooler temperatures for example it was -4°c outside
Students are measuring the temperatures of two substances in a chemistry lab. Substance A is 5 degrees Celsius below 0 degrees Celsius. Substance B is 9 degrees Celsius below 0 degrees Celsius. Which statement is true?
a solid; frozen
On a thermometer, temperatures above zero are written as positive and below zero as negative. How will a reading of 3 degrees celsius below zero be written?
It freezes.
it freezes
Yes, water will freeze below zero degrees Celsius. The freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius, but it can freeze at lower temperatures if the conditions are right.
It is not! Below -40 degrees (where C and F are the same), x deg Celsius is colder than x deg F, while above -40 deg Celsius is hotter. Just because you are used to temperatures above -40 degrees does not mean that what happens below that temperature can be ignored.
Temperatures on Venus don't get much below about 460 degrees Celsius.
Below 5 degrees Celsius (41 degrees Fahrenheit), most bacteria that are associated with foodborne illnesses would stop increasing in number.
Not at room temperature. But it is a molecular solid at temperatures below -78 degrees Celsius.