You dont have snow flakes at degrees above 0, because then it is not snow, but rain
It is a solid
A one degree rise on the Celsius scale is bigger. A one degree rise on the Celsius scale is 1.8 rise on Fahrenheit scale.
No. Fahrenheit to Celsius is figured out by this equation: C=(F-32) x 5/9 AND Celsius to Fahrenheit uses this equation: F=(9/5 x C) + 32 No, 1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.22 degrees Celsius
-6 degrees Celsius is colder; it is farther from zero than -4 degrees.
No. On the Celsius scale, the degree intervals are 1.8 times as large, so that a Celsius "degree" and a Fahrenheit "degree" are not the same thing. (see related question)
It is a solid
It boils
At 100 degree celsius water starts boiling. It starts changing into water vapour. 100 degree celsius is the boiling point of water.
There is no difference between "degree Celsius" and "-degree Celsius." Both terminologies refer to the unit of temperature measurement known as Celsius, which is commonly used in scientific and everyday applications. The hyphen in "-degree Celsius" is not necessary and may be a typographical error.
35 degree Celsius = 95 degree Fahrenheit 35 degree Celsius = 554.67 degree Rankine 35 degree Celsius = 28 degree Reaumur 35 degree Celsius = 308.15 kelvin
no difference
No difference.
No difference.
There is no difference between degree Celsius and Celsius degree. Both terms are used interchangeably to refer to a unit of temperature measurement on the Celsius scale.
35.6 degree Celsius = 96.08 degree Fahrenheit
At 1 degree Celsius, water is in its liquid state. This is because it is above its freezing point of 0 degrees Celsius but below its boiling point of 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure.
A degree Celsius is a measure of temperature.