100 degrees. The increments in both scales are identical.
374 Fahrenheit is the same temperature as 190 Celsius.
zero
Temperature is easy to convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius yourself. You can use the formula Tc = (5/9)*(Tf-32) where Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. -35 F is -37C.
80 Farenheit is the same temperature as (26 and 2/3) Celsius, no matter where you are.
0
A change of 1 Kelvin is exactly the same as a change of 1 Celsius degree.
convert 68 fahrenheit to celsius. (celsius =(fehrenhit -32)/ 1.8)
A change of 100 degrees K is equal to a change of 100 degrees Celsius.
omg 11c
It changes in proportion to the temperature change.
It changes in proportion to the temperature change.
No, it is not. A Celsius degree equals 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees.
If you know how much Fahrenheit use; (F-32)X 5/9 = Celsius (example; 1° Fahrenheit = -17.2° Celsius) If you know how much Celsius use; C x 9/5 + 32 = Fahrenheit (example: 1° Celsius = 33.8 ° Fahrenheit) There is one temperature where they are the same. (-40C = -40F)
-- A change of 1 on the Kelvin and Celsius scales is the same change. -- A change of 1 on the Fahrenheit scale is only 5/9 as much.
275 degrees
Temperature Fahrenheit = Temperature Celsius(1.80) + 32 Temperature Fahrenheit = (0.6 Celsius )(1.80) + 32 = 33.1 degrees Fahrenheit -----------------------------------
The temperature doesn't decrease it stays the same while it is melting. Because temperature is heat which is Kinetic Energy (KE) so when the temperature changes the KE changes. A change of state like ice to water or water to steam or vice versa is a state change or a change in potential energy (PE). They both can'y change at the same time so when the ice is melting the PE is changing and the KE is staying the same. ultimately you can have ice at 0 degrees celsius and water at 0 degrees celsius. This happens if there is the same amount of heat added during the state change as before. sources: chemistry class