Minus zero in Fahrenheit is the same as zero degrees Fahrenheit, as there is no concept of negative zero in temperature scales. Thus, minus zero Fahrenheit is equivalent to 0°F.
A Fahrenheit degree is smaller than a Kelvin degree. In the Fahrenheit scale, one degree is equal to 1/180th of the interval between the freezing point and boiling point of water, while in the Kelvin scale, one degree is equal to the same size increment as one Celsius degree, but starting from absolute zero.
180 degrees below zero Celsius is equal to -292 degrees Fahrenheit.
At zero degrees kelvin, absolute zero. This is also the temperature at which some elements display the Bose-Einstein condensate, theorized by Einstein but not demonstrated until decades after his death.
Zero Degrees Fahrenheit is called nothing. Zero degrees Celsius is the freezing point for water and the melting point for ice, while Zero degrees Kelvin is called Absolute zero. It is the temperature of space. Now, if you mean when water hits the zero degree celcius mark, it's called the freezing point.
Degree zero refers to mathematical objects or functions that have no non-zero terms or components. In the context of polynomials, a degree zero polynomial is simply a constant term. In linear algebra, a vector space can have elements with degree zero, such as the zero vector.
-- Zero Kelvin-- minus 273.15 Celsius-- minus 459.7 Fahrenheit
0 degrees Celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit
32 to zero
zero degree Celsius
That's not a zero. The small circle is the symbol for "degree."
0 degrees Celsius is equal to 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Rankine. Rankine is a temperature scale that is used alongside Fahrenheit, where 0 Rankine is absolute zero and each degree Rankine is equal to a degree Fahrenheit.
Zero Minus Ten has 259 pages.
Yes. 1 degree of Fahrenheit is 5/9 of a degree Celsius (centigrade)
Try "Rankine" instead of "Rakine". In the same way that the SI unit of temperature the Kelvin is defined as being (effectively) the celsius scale, but with zero set at Absolute zero, the Rankine scale has the same degree size as Fahrenheit, but with zero = Absolute zero. So 0 Rankine = -459 Fahrenheit Freezing point of water = 491.67 R Boiling point of water = 671.641 R
40 degrees below zero Celsius is equal to -40 degrees Fahrenheit.
Zero minus zero equals zero.