Yes, 545 K = 272 ºC
1 Kelvin = -272 Celsius = -457.6 Fahrenheit
No, one kelvin is equal to one degree Celsius in terms of increments, but they have different starting points. The Celsius scale starts at -273.15 degrees, while the Kelvin scale starts at zero.
The answer is 271.85 C (approx.). The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero and is used in scientific laboratories. Celsius is for general use and set 0 and 100 as melting and boiling point of water respectively. To convert from K to C, subtract 273.15 from K.
A Kelvin is larger than a Celsius degree. In the Celsius scale, there are 100 equal increments between the freezing and boiling points of water, while in the Kelvin scale, there are also 100 equal increments but starting from absolute zero.
Answer: 1 K = -272 ºC
0 degrees Kelvin is absolute zero, the lowest possible temperature at which particles stop moving. It is equal to -273.15 degrees Celsius and -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit. At absolute zero, all molecular motion ceases.
The temperature must decrease by 275 degrees Celsius to reach the freezing point of helium at -272 degrees Celsius.
272 ounces is equal to 17 pounds.
water can't actually reach that temperature because temperature is actually a measurement of how fast the particles in an object are moving. once they reach boiling point (100) the water particles cant go any faster and so they evaporate and change into a gas. if you left the water on the heat then it would eventually all evaporate and there would be nothing left in the container. if you put a lid on the container it would explode because the particle's would have no where to escape.
First of all, Kelvin absolute zero = -272 degrees Celsius. Secondly, the set of real numbers which contain Celsius numbers and negative Fahrenheit numbers are as follows: Negative X Fahrenheit would = -1 to -31 (because two negatives make a positive, and this would also be consistent with temperatures in the range of 1 to 31 degrees Fahrenheit, along which range all of the Celsius numbers are negative). So, 1 deg F to 31 deg F would then correlate with negative Celsius temperatures (but since we are using the numbers -1 to -31, this would correlate to positive X Celsius). Thus, the range of Kelvin temperatures would be 273 to 304. The reason for which the answer is somewhat convoluted is due to the fact that there do not exist any negative Fahrenheit temperatures for which Celsius temperatures are positive. Thus, negative numbers have to be used in order to "turn the equation around", so to speak, because there is a range of temperatures (1 to 31, in real numbers) Fahrenheit, for which Celsius temperatures are below zero, or in the negative ... due to the fact that deg 0 deg C = 32 deg F.
Helium has the lowest melting point of any element, and it doesn't really form a solid under normal conditions, as it becomes a liquid around -272 degrees Celsius.
Helium is a noble gas at room temperature, and exists as a colorless, odorless gas. Helium becomes a liquid at very low temperatures, about -269 degrees Celsius, and a solid at an even lower temperature of around -272 degrees Celsius.