They are the last names of the founders of the temperature scales of Swedish and German heritage, respectively.
(Celsius x 1.8)+32= Fahrenheit (Fahrenheit-32)/1.8= Celsius
Fahrenheit = (Celsius * 1.8) + 32 Celsius = (Fahrenheit - 32) / 1.8
400 Fahrenheit = 204.4 Celsius 400 Celsius = 752 Fahrenheit
108 Fahrenheit is 42.2 Celsius
140 degrees Celsius is 284 degrees Fahrenheit.
Fahrenheit and Celsius
Fahrenheit and Celsius
Celsius, Fahrenheit
400 Fahrenheit = 204.4 Celsius 400 Celsius = 752 Fahrenheit
(Celsius x 1.8)+32= Fahrenheit (Fahrenheit-32)/1.8= Celsius
Fahrenheit = (Celsius * 1.8) + 32 Celsius = (Fahrenheit - 32) / 1.8
It happens to be -40 Celsius too.
20 degrees Celsius = 68 degrees Fahrenheit 30 degrees Celsius = 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
Anders Celsius created the Celsius scale in 1742, and Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit developed the Fahrenheit scale in 1724.
101.5 degrees Fahrenheit = 38.61 degrees Celsius.
The last names of the men who devised the temperature scales.
147 degrees Fahrenheit is approximately 64 degrees Celsius. You can convert Fahrenheit to Celsius by subtracting 32 from the Fahrenheit temperature and then multiplying by 5/9.