to make it more pacific of what they are doing. also to help them to measure it accuaratly also to keep it a fair test. scientest are very suspicouse these days because they can sometimes do things wrong which can cause confusion.
ps i know this because i am an american scientists daughter.
-40 degrees is the same temperature in both scales.
if groups of scientists didn't work together they would go at different speeds and probably get different results need to describe it completely so that when they use that same factor in an experiment they have the data.
No!
Lots of different scientists test the same things to compare different conclusions.
Good science is reproducible, meaning that other scientists should be able to conduct the same analysis and get similar results. If scientists try the experiments and get different results, then it often means that the original publishers did something wrong.
they are all temperature scales they are all temperature scales
The scales used by scientists are Celsius (or Centigrade) and Kelvin. Both use a degree which has the same value. However, the Kelvin scale is an absolute scale which means that 10K is 10 times "warmer" than 1K. This is not true for the Celsius scale.
The temperature reading that is the same on both Celsius and Fahrenheit scales is -40 degrees.
Negative 40 degrees is the temperature that will be the same on Fahrenheit and Celsius scales.
at -40 on both scales.
The scales used by scientists are Celsius (or Centigrade) and Kelvin. Both use a degree which has the same value. However, the Kelvin scale is an absolute scale which means that 10K is 10 times "warmer" than 1K. This is not true for the Celsius scale.
The temperature -40 degrees is the same value in both Celsius and Fahrenheit scales.
Celsius and Kelvin
No, they're completely different temperature scales.
The temperature when both the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales are the same is - 40 degrees.
Degrees Celsius and Fahrenheit can be the same at -40 degrees, as -40 degrees Celsius is equivalent to -40 degrees Fahrenheit. This intersection point is the only temperature where the two temperature scales are equal.
The Fahrenheit and Celsius scales will show the same temperature at -40 degrees, as this is the point where the scales intersect.