ewan ko bakit nyu sakin tatanong aq b teacher nyu
Could be the conversion factor - but only if the two sets of measurements are on scales that are linear AND absolute.
That's both the "Celsius" and the "Kelvin" scales.
The normal scales in which temperature is measured - Fahrenheit or Celsius - are interval scales but not ratio scales. This is because the 0 points are arbitrary. As a consequence, the difference between two fixed temperature cannot be expressed as a fraction.For example 10 deg C is NOT 10 times as warm as 1 deg C.
At any point in the Celsius scale, the difference between degrees Celsius and degrees Kelvin is 273.15. At no point do the two scales cross.
You can't, because they aren't. The Fahrenheit and Kelvin scales match at exactly 574.5875 degrees. 255.37 Kelvin is equivalent to 0oF.To prove or disprove an equivalent, cite the conversion equation which in the Fahrenheit/Kelvin case is:= = [°F] = [K] × 9⁄5 − 459.67
To convert between any unit of temperature to any other unit of temperature requires that you know the conversion formula between the two temperature scales, and then you have to solve the formula to calculate the conversion. You can find the formulas on Wikipedia at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperature_conversion, or you could use a conversion calculator like http://www.convertanyunit.com/, which not only calculates the conversion for you, but also shows the conversion formula together with the result.
They are scales for measuring temperature.
It is a question requiring you to list the differences between the two temperature scales.
-40 degrees is the same temperature in both scales.
they are all temperature scales they are all temperature scales
Could be the conversion factor - but only if the two sets of measurements are on scales that are linear AND absolute.
The thermometer scales the temperature.
That's both the "Celsius" and the "Kelvin" scales.
In contemporary models the highest temperature is Plank Temperature equal to 1.417 X 10^32 degrees Celsius. Actually at such a temperature the differences between the temperature scales are irrelevant.
The normal scales in which temperature is measured - Fahrenheit or Celsius - are interval scales but not ratio scales. This is because the 0 points are arbitrary. As a consequence, the difference between two fixed temperature cannot be expressed as a fraction.For example 10 deg C is NOT 10 times as warm as 1 deg C.
The two most common temperature scales are... Celsius and Kelvin. *For Canada.*
Celsius and Kelvin scales.