98.6 degrees
If your body temperature was recorded as 37 degrees, it is most likely in degrees Celsius (°C), as this is the standard scale for measuring human body temperature. In Fahrenheit, 37 degrees would be approximately 98.6 degrees, which is also considered normal body temperature. Therefore, the context usually suggests Celsius for a body temperature reading of 37 degrees.
Nope - normal body temperature in Celsius is 37 degrees.
The temperature 98.6°F (approximately equal to 37° Celsius) is the reference temperature long used to represent the average "normal human body temperature." The actual base temperature varies by individual, and is slightly lower in most adults. An individual's body temperature also varies throughout the day, generally lower at night and higher during the day.
The average body temperature for humans is 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. It can fluctuate from 97.8 degrees Fahrenheit to 99 degrees Fahrenheit in a healthy person.
normal human body temperature 36.8±0.7 degrees celsius scale
98.6 degrees
Celsius.
The average body temperature of 37 degrees Celsius is typically measured on the Celsius scale, which is the most commonly used scale for medical and scientific purposes. This temperature is considered the standard healthy body temperature for adults.
37 degrees Celsius = 558.27 degrees Rankine.
37 degrees Celsius
The normal temperature of the body is: - on Celsius scale: 36,5 0C - on Fahrenheit scale: 97,7 0F
The Fahrenheit scale and Celsius scale are different one way by temperature limits. 1. On the Fahrenheit scale, water freezes at 32 degrees. On the Celsius scale, water freezes at 0 degrees. 2. On Fahrenheit scale, comfortable room temp. is 70-80 degrees. Celsius: 20-30 degrees. 3. Normal body temp: 98.6 degrees(fahrenheit) 37 degrees(celsius) 4.Highest recorded air temp: 136.5 degrees(fahrenheit) 58 degrees(celsius) 5. Water boils at 212 degrees(fahrenheit) 100 degrees(celcius) :D
98.4 degrees Celsius = 371.55 kelvin 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit = 310.15 kelvin
"Degrees". On the Celsius scale, each degree is 1/100th of the difference between the freezing point of water, and the boiling point of water. Dr. Fahrenheit was a medical doctor, not a scientist, so he was more concerned with human anatomy. The coldest thing he could fix as a standard temperature was the freezing point of a brine mixture in water. He devised the temperature scale with 100 degrees between the freezing point of his brine mixture and the temperature of the human body. (We now know that he was a little off; the normal temperature of a human body is 98.6 degrees rather than 100.)
If the normal body temperature on the temperature scale is 310, this means the temperature scale is using Kelvin. To convert Celsius to Kelvin you just need to add 37 and the normal body temperature is 273 Celsius.
Fahenreit was an early maker of thermometers so he had to develop a scale to mark the thermometers with. Water freezes at 32 degrees. The temperature of the human body is 98 degrees. Water boils at 212 degrees.