Certainly. Today is January 6, and all the gases in the air have done exactly that
every day for the past two weeks here in Chicago.
35.3 degrees Celsius = 95.54 degrees Fahrenheit The formula is 9/5Xcelsius + 32 or you can go to www.unit-conversion.info
Yes, they can. Centigrade (Celsius) can go as low as -273.15 degrees C. The same temperature on the Fahrenheit scale is -459.67 degrees -- both indicate absolute zero (0K). A notable difference caused by having "degrees" of two different sizes and definitions is that negative temperatures on Celsius indicate "below the freezing point of water" (0 degrees C), while below freezing on the Fahrenheit scale includes positive values from 31 down to 0, the freezing point being 32 degrees F.
Sixty one degrees Fahrenheit to Celsius is sixteen point zero one Celsius. the formula to work these problems is to: Fahrenheit to Celsius= subtract 32, multiply by 5 and then divide by 9 Celsius to Fahrenheit multiply by 9, divide by 5 and add 32
Use this equation to convert degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC) to degrees Fahrenheit (ºF): (ºC x 1.8) + 32 =ºFUse this equation to convert degrees Fahrenheit (ºF) to degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC): (ºF - 32) / 1.8 =ºC
Add 273 to go from temperatures in degrees Celsius to Kelvin. Thus, -100 degrees Celsius is (-100+273=) 173 K.
Yes, it can go below 0 degrees to minus Celsius for cooler temperatures for example it was -4°c outside
The short answer is yes 10 degrees Celsius is a lower temperature than 16 degrees Celsius. 0 degrees Celsius is equal to freezing or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. As the numbers go up on both scales so does the temperature.
No. If a bee's body temperature drops below about 10 degrees Celsius it will die.
18 degrees Celsius = 64.4 degrees Fahrenheit To get an answer to this sort of temperature conversion requirement go to the link below. It is quicker than asking the question here.
The Celsius and the Fahrenheit scales don't go down that far.
Celsius! 50 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to about 10 degrees Celsius. In Fahrenheit, the climatic temperature can reach over 100, but in Celsius it will go into negatives and up to about 50 (max).
Zero degrees Celsius is equal to 32 degrees Fahrenheit. Go any higher than the 1.8 degrees Celsius to 32 degrees is added. Each down 1.8 degrees from 32 degrees Celsius which is low.
273
no
450,000 degrees celsius.
No, Celsius is a temperature scale which can go down to -273.15. The hottest temperature attained by scientists is approx 4 trillion degrees and the theoretical maximum is 1.4*10^32 [140 nonillion] degrees. On balance, then, the range of negative temperatures on the Celsius scale is somewhat smaller than the positive temperatures.
Yes.