It really depends on how hot the surroundings are
Kelvin scale and degrees Celsius scale have equal increments, so for every increase of 1 K there is an equal increase of 1 degree Celsius. The scales are merely offset by about 273 units. Here is a formula for conversion: K=[degrees Celsius]+273.15
174 kelvins are there in 1 Celsius..* * * * *That is utter nonsense.First of 1 Kelvin degree is the same, exactly, as 1 Celsius degree.
1 degree Celsius = 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit
1ºC = 274.15K
1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.22 degrees Celsius
Kelvin scale and degrees Celsius scale have equal increments, so for every increase of 1 K there is an equal increase of 1 degree Celsius. The scales are merely offset by about 273 units. Here is a formula for conversion: K=[degrees Celsius]+273.15
0 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 273 degrees Kelvin. an increase of 1 degree Celsius is equal to an increase of 1 degree Kelvin. Therefore they will never display the same reading.
A 1 degree increase in either is the same increase in the amount of thermodynamic temperature. In layman's terms, a 1 degree increase in either feels the same.
correct
174 kelvins are there in 1 Celsius..* * * * *That is utter nonsense.First of 1 Kelvin degree is the same, exactly, as 1 Celsius degree.
It take 4.2 Joules to raise 1 gram of water by 1 degree Celsius. Each gram of water is heated by 1.26 Joules, creating an increase in temperature of .3 degrees Celsius.
1 degree Fahrenheit is equal to 17.2222222 or 17.22 degrees celsius. __________________________________________________________ 1 Fahrenheit = 5/9 degree Celsius
-273K = 0 degree Celsius
No, it is not. it can be seen when looking at the conversion factor of Kelvin to Celsius, let K=kelvin and C=celsius, then the equation is K=273.15+C, the units are changed but the value of change is the same.
1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.2 degrees Celsius.17.2
1 degree Kelvin = -272.15 degrees Celsius.
1 degree Celsius = 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit.