if it is one degree below 0 its integer is negative like in this case -1 . to figure it out you just start counting up again but make sure you put the right integer - or +
if the integer is + which means positive is above 0 but if is - below 0
Absolute zero is the theoretically coldest temperature. It is not possible to actually achieve absolute zero, only to approach it. In laboratory experiments, temperatures below one microkelvin have been achieved - i.e., less than a millionth of a degree above absolute zero.
The relationship between Kelvin and Celsius scale is K=C+273. 15. Where K is Kelvin temperature and C is Celsius temperature. Each degree on the Kelvin scale equals the same degree in Celsius scale differing only in the zero value. The freezing point of water and absolute zero are the zero values of Celsius and Kelvin scale respectively.
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
The Celsius and Kelvin temperature scales have the same size unit. One degree Celsius is equal in size to one Kelvin, with the only difference being their zero points.
Yes, a degree Celsius is equal to a degree Kelvin. But because the two scales have different reference points, a given temperature in Celsius will not equal the same temperature in Kelvin. While an increase of on degree on one scale will be same as an increase of one degree on the other, one degree Celsius does not equal one degree Kelvin.The Kelvin temperature scale is based off of what we know to be absolute zero -- the temperature that represents the absolute absence of heat. It uses absolute zero as its starting point, marking that as 0 K. (Note: Kelvin temperatures are not measured as degrees, just number Kelvin.) It then goes upwards, marking each new point (1 K, 2 K, 3 K, etc.) with the same spacing between degrees as Celsius.The Celsius temperature is based off of the freezing/melting points and the boiling/condensing points of water. It uses 0°C for the first point and 100°C for the second.-273.16° Celsius is equal to 0 K is equal to -459.67° Fahrenheit.
-6 < -2
The temperature at which all three phases of a substance can exist in equilibrium. This temperature occurs at only one pressure.
The temperature was up by about one degree. The temperature rose about one degree. The temperature dropped about one degree.
Absolute zero is the theoretically coldest temperature. It is not possible to actually achieve absolute zero, only to approach it. In laboratory experiments, temperatures below one microkelvin have been achieved - i.e., less than a millionth of a degree above absolute zero.
The relationship between Kelvin and Celsius scale is K=C+273. 15. Where K is Kelvin temperature and C is Celsius temperature. Each degree on the Kelvin scale equals the same degree in Celsius scale differing only in the zero value. The freezing point of water and absolute zero are the zero values of Celsius and Kelvin scale respectively.
One degree in the Kelvin scale is equal to one degree in the Celsius scale. They do however have different 'starting' points. Celsius starts (zero degrees 00 C) at the freezing temperature of water. Kelvin starts (zero degrees 00 K) is at absolute zero. Which is the coldest temperature obtainable. This temperature is equal to -273.150 C
On the Celsius and Kelvin scales, the degrees are the same size, but the Kelvin scale has its zero point at the lowest possible temperature, absolute zero. For Celsius, the zero point is the freezing point of water.So temperatures expressed on the Kelvin scale are 273.15 degrees (kelvins) higher in number than the same temperature expressed in Celsius.And a temperature of 1°C would be the same as a temperature of 274.15 K (you do not use degree marks with Kelvin).
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
the temperature is below one degree or the temp. of ice water
No, the Kelvin is the metric unit of temperature. Zero Kelvin is absolute zero, -273.15°C. A difference of one Kelvin is the same as a difference of one Celsius degree.
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.
Yes, in temperature measurements, negative four degrees (-4) is colder than negative one degree (-1). This is because the scale represents temperatures below zero, where the further you go into the negative numbers, the colder it gets. Therefore, -4 is less than -1, indicating a lower temperature.