In the Celsius scale (as well as in other currently used temperature scales), a larger number indicates a warmer temperature.
A 5˚ increase in Celsius is warmer than a 5˚ increase in Fahrenheit. 5˚ C is equivalent to 41˚F, or 5˚F is equivalent to -15˚C.
15 degrees Fahrenheit = -9.4 degrees Celsius.
-12
15 degrees C
-15 degrees Celsius = 5 degrees Fahrenheit
7 degrees Celsius is warmer than 3.5. The higher the number in degrees, the warmer it is!
I suggest you convert each of the Fahrenheit temperatures to Celsius (or the other way round, each of the Celsius temperatures to Fahrenheit), and then compare.
A 5˚ increase in Celsius is warmer than a 5˚ increase in Fahrenheit. 5˚ C is equivalent to 41˚F, or 5˚F is equivalent to -15˚C.
no, -3 is warmer than -15
-15 degree Celsius is colder than -3 degrees Celsius.
They are about the same because 60 degrees Fahrenheit is equivalent to 15.56 degrees Celsius
-3 Celsius is warmer.
-15
265.15 degrees Kelvin is 15 degrees Celsius lower than seven degrees Celsius.
This question begs the benefit of the doubt ... that it conflates two separate questions cleverly, rather than blindly. The answers to both are: 1). 15°C is the warmer temperature. 2). It exceeds the other one by 12°C.
5C is colder than 15C.
It gets cold in winter (November- March) about 1 degrees Celsius, sometimes less. Then at the moment (May) it's about 15 degrees Celsius. In summer (June-August), it doesn't usually get much warmer than 25 degrees Celsius