Corrosive Bases
20 degrees above freezing in Celsius is 50 degrees Fahrenheit
Actually, Diesel is not flammable, it is combustible. The difference is the flash point. Diesel does not flash until 143 degrees Fahrenheit. Anything between 100 and 200 is combustible; less than 100 is flammable. Compare it to "gasoline" which has a flash point of -42 F (I think).
At day we have 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) and at night we have 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit). The temperature difference between day and night is 10 degrees Celsius or 18 degrees Fahrenheit.
6 degrees Fahrenheit is warmer. * * * * * 6 deg F is below freezing, 6 deg C is above freezing. So which is warmer?
gasolinekerosinefuel oilbunker fuel oildiesel oilcetanehexaneheptaneoctanenonanemolten asphaltetc.Technically, anything with a closed-cup flash point at or above 100 degrees F would be classified as a "combustible liquid" not "flammable liquid". This would include diesel and fuel oil. NFPA 30.
above it will be freezing at 32 degrees Fahrenheit
Ice melts at 0 degrees Celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit
34 degrees Fahrenheit.
20 degrees above freezing in Celsius is 50 degrees Fahrenheit
No. There are liquids that boil at a few degrees above absolute zero (helium for example) and liquids that boil at several thousand degrees above absolute zero (tungsten for example)
The freezing point is 32degrees Fahrenheit (°F).Therefore 47oF is 15oF above the freezing point.
35o Fahrenheit is just 3 degrees above freezing! 35o Celsius is 95o Fahrenheit.
Of course they do! 20 degrees Fahrenheit is below freezing and Alaska does have a summer, no matter how short. They even go above 20 degrees Celsius in the summer and that is 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
Actually, Diesel is not flammable, it is combustible. The difference is the flash point. Diesel does not flash until 143 degrees Fahrenheit. Anything between 100 and 200 is combustible; less than 100 is flammable. Compare it to "gasoline" which has a flash point of -42 F (I think).
Since Celsius degrees are larger than Fahrenheit degrees, above -40 degrees (where the scales coincide) any number in Celsius will be hotter than the corresponding number in Fahrenheit.
73.4
The freezing point of water in Fahrenheit is 32 degrees above zero.