You appear to have your facts mixed up.
82 degrees can be either Fahrenheit or CELCIUS
Cesium (Caesium) is an element in Group '1' of the Periodic Table.
82 Degrees F is pleasantly warm to humans; Sea-side beach weather.
82 degrees C is very close to the boiling point of water, and would scald humans.
Caesium is a 'radio-active' element in Group '1' of the Periodic Table and would react explosively with water.
27.8 degrees celsius
82 pounds is 37.19kg
There are approximately 37.2 kilograms in 82 pounds.
The volume displaced is '82 mL' 'mL' means millilitres, which is a volume measure for liquids. NB 1 mL = 1/1000 of a litre. Hence the ball bearing is also 82 mL. . because it just pushes aside 82 mL of water.
82 pounds is equal to approximately 37.19 kilograms.
The answer depends on which temperature scale is under consideration. 82 degrees Celsius is very hot. 82 degrees Fahrenheit is pretty warm. 82 Kelvin will be very cold and every living form on the Earth will be frozen and will be immobile at that temperature.
I think it is warm
It gets to about 82-84 degrees Fahrenheit
The anagrams are miscue and cesium (also caesium, a metallic element that melts at only 82 degrees F).
The answer depends on the scale. 82 degrees F is warm, 82 deg C is hot, and 82 deg R is very hot.
Hot, water on 100 degree Celsius is boiling
82 degrees Celsius
average is 60 degrees the high in January is 82 the low in June, July and august is 43 degrees
In atomic form (as opposed to being an ion), cesium-137 has 55 electrons, just as all cesium atoms have.
Jupiter Is 12986549712 kilometers away from the Sun so it is as cold as -82 F, but its core temperature Is 344453 C. That's pretty hot. It also has a hairy mantle that keeps it warm.
It is: 8 degrees because 82 degrees+8 degrees = 90 degrees
You are looking for the symbol of cesium (Cs) and indication of its mass number. The mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons. So if every atom of cesium has 55 protons, then the mass number of this isotope is 137. The mass number is indicated in superscript before the symbol: 137Cs