Yes, if the glass for the cutting board has a linear coefficient of expansion of 5 x 10-6 per Kelvin, it means that for every degree Kelvin increase in temperature within the range of 0C to 300C, the glass will expand linearly by a factor of 5 x 10-6 of its original size.
Take your Kelvin temperature and subtract 273.15
Water freezes at 273.15 kelvin on the Kelvin temperature scale.
To convert Celsius to Kelvin, simply add 273.15 to the Celsius temperature. Therefore, the Kelvin temperature of 56.5°C is 329.65 K.
To convert temperature from Celsius to Kelvin, add 273.15 to the Celsius temperature. Therefore, -34°C in Kelvin would be 239.15 K.
The SI unit for temperature is the kelvin.
use the T=2a/(bk) equation shown in the first link, plugging in a and b values found in the second link. proofs are shown in the joule-thomson expansion wikipedia page as well as the van der waals equation of state page.
That depends on the exact details. For a gas, the ideal gas law is usually a good approximation: other things being equal, the volume is directly proportional to the absolute temperature (that is, the temperature expressed in kelvin). For a liquid or gas, the expansion is much less than in a gas. You can look up the coefficient of expansion for a specific substance, and then use the definition of the coefficient; that is, the volume change is equal to (volume) times (temperature difference) x (coefficient of volume expansion).
The coefficient of thermal expansion of ethanol at 20 degrees Celsius, in volumetric terms, is 750*10-6 per Kelvin.The coefficient of thermal expansion of ethanol at 20 degrees Celsius, in volumetric terms, is 750*10-6 per Kelvin.The coefficient of thermal expansion of ethanol at 20 degrees Celsius, in volumetric terms, is 750*10-6 per Kelvin.The coefficient of thermal expansion of ethanol at 20 degrees Celsius, in volumetric terms, is 750*10-6 per Kelvin.
There is no such thing as an opposite to Kelvin temperature.There is no such thing as an opposite to Kelvin temperature.There is no such thing as an opposite to Kelvin temperature.There is no such thing as an opposite to Kelvin temperature.
You mean coefficient of linear expansion? Its unit is SI system is per kelvin Or practically speaking it may be given in per degree Celsius.
Kelvin. Kelvin (K) = oC + 273.15
kelvin
Take your Kelvin temperature and subtract 273.15
Gases expand in proportion to the change in absolute temperature (deg kelvin). Thus if you took a volume of a gas at say 0 deg C (273 kelvin) and heated it to 273 deg C, that is doubling the degrees kelvin, keeping the pressure constant, the volume would double. Water on the other hand has a coefficient of expansion of 207 x 10-6 per deg Kelvin, so doubling its absolute temperature from 0 degC to 273 degC would only increase its volume by 5.65 x 10-2 = 0.0565, or 5.65 percent
No the Kelvin temperature is higher. The conversion for Kelvin to Celsius is K=c+273.15.
The objects Kelvin temperature. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero (-273 degrees Celsius)
313 Kelvin.