It's about 50 degrees Fahrenheit at the bottom, but the water temperature is just above freezing. Many explorers have gone down and have caught hypothermia.
at 10 am was 234 degrees
Also 2 degrees.
It just happens that the conversion formula from Celsius to Fahrenheit (and vice versa) gives this result. Here is the conversion formula for -40 C to Fahrenheit:F = (C x 1.8) + 32F = (-40 x 1.8) + 32F = -72 + 32Fahrenheit = -40°
well its not gone to be warm or hot weather
Do you mean what temperature do you set it at? Comfort level is normally between 66 and 72 degrees. If you set your thermostat back when gone or at night dont drop it any more than about 6 degrees to maintain any energy savings your trying to get.
Restate the question: What is the temperature change if it goes from 15C to -5C?Answer: -20 Celsius degreesIf the temperature goes from 15C to -5C it has gone down 20 degrees.You could also say: change = ending value - starting value= -5 - (+15)= -5 - 15= -20.
You may have an ambient temperature sensor that has gone bad. I'm not sure what kind of vehicle you have, so I don't know what system your vehicle has. But that will give you a good start.
uotside temp sensor in front of the radiator has gone bad
Two things could have happened for the ice to melt. The temperature could have gone above 0 degrees. Or a pressure change could have lower the freezing point so that the ice will melt at a temperature where it was frozen.
32 degrees Fahrenheit is at freezing. 0 degrees Celsius. 212 degrees Fahrenheit is at boiling. 100 degrees Celsius. Why? Here is one response: Researchers have gone to their graves trying to figure out what old man Fahrenheit was up to, Leslie. Here's the story as well as I can piece it together: Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686-1736) was a German instrument maker who invented the first practical mercury thermometer. Casting about for a suitable scale for his device, he visited the Danish astronomer Ole Romer, who had devised a system of his own. As it turned out, it was a case of the blind leading the blind. Romer had decided that the boiling point of water should be 60 degrees. This at least had the strength of numerological tradition behind it (60 minutes in an hour, right?). But zero was totally arbitrary, the main consideration apparently being that it should be colder than it ever got in Denmark. (Romer didn't like using negative numbers in his weather logbook.) In addition to the boiling point of water, the landmarks on Romer's scale were the freezing point of water, 7-1/2 degrees, and body temperature, 22-1/2 degrees. D.G., simple soul that he was, thought this cockeyed system was the soul of elegance. He made one useful change: to get rid of the fractions, he multiplied Romer's degrees by 4, giving him 30 for the freezing point and 90 for body temperature. Then, for reasons nobody has ever been able to fathom, he multiplied all the numbers by 16/15, making 32 freezing and 96 body temperature. Boiling point for the time being he ignored altogether. By and by Fahrenheit got ready to present his scale to London's Royal Society, the scientific big leagues of the day. It dawned on him that it was going to look a little strange having the zero on his scale just sort of hanging off the end, so to speak. So he cooked up the explanation that zero was the temperature of a mix of ice, water, and ammonium chloride. At some point Fahrenheit figured out that the boiling point of water came in at 212 degrees. Over time this replaced body temp as the upper landmark on his scale. Meanwhile, as more precise measurements were made, body temperature had to be adjusted to 98.6 degrees. In short, 100 means nothing at all on the Fahrenheit scale, 96 used to mean something but doesn't anymore, and 0 is colder than it ever gets in Denmark. Brilliant. Lest we get too down on Fahrenheit, though, consider Anders Celsius, who devised the centigrade scale (0 to 100). Everybody agrees Celsius's scale makes more sense than Fahrenheit's. Trouble is, the original Celsius scale had 100 for freezing, 0 for boiling. In other words, it was upside-down. (The numbers were reversed after Celsius's death.) These thermometer guys, what gets into them? Must be too much mercury exposure. OK, you're saying, very interesting. But what I REALLY need is a temperature trivia question that will make me the life of the party. I have just the thing. At what temperature are the Fahrenheit and Celsius readings the same? People will look at you with newfound respect when you reveal the astonishing answer: minus 40. - Cecil Adams
I remember waking up freezing one February morning and hearing that the temperature had gone down to 4.3 degrees C (about 39 degrees F)! That is highly unusual though, as the temperature seldom dips below 10 degrees C (50 degrees F) and even then, it's just for a few days.