Yes, it is. One degree Fahrenheit is a small unit than one degree Celsius. The ration is 9 to 5, with 9 degrees Fahrenheit being the same as 5 degrees Celsius.
5 Fahrenheit is a smaller increase of temperature than 5 Celsius.
There are two reasons for this. The first is that a Fahrenheit degree is smaller than a Celsius degree. Four Celsius degrees is the same size as nine Fahrenheit degrees. The second reason is that 32 degrees Fahrenheit is zero degrees Celsius. If you put those two ideas together you figure out that -40°F = -40°C.
A degree Celsius, although it has the same name, is equal to 1.8 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. You can see that for the freezing and boiling points of water, there are 100 Celsius degrees (100-0) between the two temperatures, while there are 180 (212-32) of the smaller fahrenheit degrees.
No. For temperatures, 45°C is much hotter than 45°F (equal to 7.22°C). Likewise, a change in temperature of 45 "degrees" on the Celsius scale is a much larger change than 45 "degrees" on the Fahrenheit scale. The Fahrenheit "degrees" are smaller intervals. Technically the numbers have the same value, but on different scales.
No. A hunder degrees C spans the same range as 180 degrees F. So a C degree is 1.8 times as large as a F degree.
5 Fahrenheit is a smaller increase of temperature than 5 Celsius.
Fahrenheit degrees are smaller, so 5°F is a smaller increase than 5°C.
After -40 degrees. At -40 degrees, the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales are equal. A temperature greater than -40 in Celsius will be smaller than its equivalent in Fahrenheit, but below -40 degrees Fahrenheit, its equivalent in Celsius will be larger.
A 5 degree Fahrenheit increase is less than a 5 degree Celsius increase
There are two reasons for this. The first is that a Fahrenheit degree is smaller than a Celsius degree. Four Celsius degrees is the same size as nine Fahrenheit degrees. The second reason is that 32 degrees Fahrenheit is zero degrees Celsius. If you put those two ideas together you figure out that -40°F = -40°C.
A degree Celsius, although it has the same name, is equal to 1.8 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. You can see that for the freezing and boiling points of water, there are 100 Celsius degrees (100-0) between the two temperatures, while there are 180 (212-32) of the smaller fahrenheit degrees.
same size. Between freezing water and boiling water, there are 180 Fahrenheit degrees (32 to 212) and 100 Celsius degrees (0 to 100). So Fahrenheit degrees are smaller, because it takes more of them to cover the same range of temperature. 1 Fahrenheit degree = 5/9 of a Celsius degree (0.555...) 1 Celsius degree = 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees
There are 100 Celsius "degrees" between the freezing and boiling points of water (0°C and 100°C). There are 180 Fahrenheit "degrees" between the freezing and boiling points of water (32°F and 212°F). This means that each Fahrenheit degree is a smaller interval, 100/180 or 5/9 the size of a Celsius degree. A Celsius degree is 9/5 (1.8) times as large as a Fahrenheit degree. This is why the differences between two temperatures is a smaller value when they are expressed in Celsius.
No. For temperatures, 45°C is much hotter than 45°F (equal to 7.22°C). Likewise, a change in temperature of 45 "degrees" on the Celsius scale is a much larger change than 45 "degrees" on the Fahrenheit scale. The Fahrenheit "degrees" are smaller intervals. Technically the numbers have the same value, but on different scales.
The temperature 10 degrees Celsius is much warmer than 0 degrees Fahrenheit. Normally higher numeric values are found on the Fahrenheit scale, with its smaller "degrees". However, the value 0°F is 32 Fahrenheit degrees below the freezing point of water, and is equal to -17.8 °C. The value 10 °C is above the freezing point of water (0°C) and is equal to 50 °F .
No. Below -40 deg C (which is also -40 deg F), the F number is smaller.
The short answer is yes 10 degrees Celsius is a lower temperature than 16 degrees Celsius. 0 degrees Celsius is equal to freezing or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. As the numbers go up on both scales so does the temperature.