Neither, it is the only point on the temperature scales where C = F. These are identical temperatures.
If you mean 25C - 40C, then this is called a mesophile.
which gets hotter land or water
Surface of the sun is hotter.
No. None of the planets is hotter than the sun.
Turn the collar and the flame will get hotter
233.15 K is -40 deg F or -40 deg C (the latter two are the same). So, to the nearest whole degree, 233K would be equal to -40F or -40C
-40C is equal to -40F in Fahrenheit.
No. The scales come together at minus 40: -40F = -40C.No. The scales come together at minus 40: -40F = -40C.No. The scales come together at minus 40: -40F = -40C.No. The scales come together at minus 40: -40F = -40C.
All between -40C to +35C, roughly. (Between -40F and 100F)
-40C = -40F Formula for conversion C-F C*9/5 + 32=F -40C*9/5 + 32 -360/5 + 32 -72 + 32 -40F Formula for conversion F-C (F-32)*5/9 =C (-40F - 32) * 5/9 -72 * 5 / 9 -360 / 9 -40C
Yes, -40 degrees Fahrenheit is equivalent to -40 degrees Celsius.
-40C is the equivalent to -40F
-40 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to -40 degrees Celsius.
40F is colder because it is only 8F above freezing point of water and 40C is warmer because it is it is about 3C higher than the human body temperature. 40F = (40 - 32) x 5/9 = 4.4444 degrees C 40C = (40 x 9/5) + 32 = 104 degrees F
Because the relation is 9/5 C + 32 = F; if you let F = C you find the point they are the same: -40F = -40C
-40C is equal to -40F. F=C9/5+32.you can get it by this.
The temperature at which Celsius and Fahrenheit readings are equal is -40 degrees. This is the point where the two temperature scales intersect.