Well 330C is hot, 330F is cold.
That depends if it is 33 degrees Celsius or 33 degrees Fahrenheit. If it was 33 degrees C then it would be hot because it is around 85 degrees F. If it was 33 degrees F....then it would be darn cold.
33 degrees Celsius is equal to 91.4 degrees Fahrenheit. That's a hot summer day.
33 degree Fahrenheit = 0.5555556 degree Celsius
what is 33 degree celsius north,44 degree celsius east
in the winter the temperature is normally 13 - 19 degrees Celsius and in the summer the temperature is normally 23 - 33 degrees Celsius the record temperature for Christchurch and New Zealand is 42 degrees Celsius
You would take the inital temperature, in this case 33 degrees F and do the following: Temperature in degrees C = 5/9(33 degrees F-32) You are first subtracting 32 and then multiplying by 5/9. Hope this helps! :)
Hot water and cold water have the same formula regardless of their temperature therefore they are equally hydrating. Hot water only appears less THIRST QUENCHING because as you know our core body temperature is around 37 degrees Celsius, So when we are thirsty our brain tells us either our body temp' is too high and/or our body is lacking fluids. so when we drink warmer water say around 25 degrees, there is only a 13 degree difference, therefore it affects your core temp' less then cold water (4 degrees, 33 degree difference) as cold water has a bigger "gap" to fill (gap being the difference in temp') your core temperature is affected more, leaving you feeling quenched and yes...hydrated
33 degree Fahrenheit = 0.5555556 degree Celsius
what is 33 degree celsius north,44 degree celsius east
33 degrees Fahrenheit = 0.5 degrees Celsius.
It is 33 Celsius degrees.
it is 6.74 centistokes
91.4 F33°C works out to 91.4°F
Well 30 C is hot, 30 F is cold. That depends if it is 30 degrees Celsius or 30 degrees Fahrenheit. If it was 30 degrees C then it would be hot because it is around 85 degrees F. If it was 30 degrees F....then it would be darn cold.
I do not think that it is at all desirable to have water at 33 deg Celsius. It is far too cold!
It is very cold because water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit
in the winter the temperature is normally 13 - 19 degrees Celsius and in the summer the temperature is normally 23 - 33 degrees Celsius the record temperature for Christchurch and New Zealand is 42 degrees Celsius
You would take the inital temperature, in this case 33 degrees F and do the following: Temperature in degrees C = 5/9(33 degrees F-32) You are first subtracting 32 and then multiplying by 5/9. Hope this helps! :)
33 degrees Celsius = 91.4 degrees Fahrenheit