The difference between the boiling and freezing point of pure water, at atmospheric pressure, is 100 on both, the degrees Celsius and Kelvin scales. It is 180 on the Fahrenheit scale.
The USA and some Caribbean islands are the only countries whose official temperature scale is Fahrenheit; in all other countries, and specially amongst scientists, the scale used is Celsius or Kelvin.
300 Kelvin is hotter than both 90 degrees Fahrenheit and 40 degrees Celsius. Kelvin is an absolute temperature scale where 0 Kelvin represents absolute zero, the coldest temperature possible. 300 Kelvin is equivalent to 80.33 degrees Fahrenheit and 26.85 degrees Celsius.
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.
No, Celsius and Kelvin are two different temperature scales that measure temperature in different ways. They start at different points, with Kelvin starting at absolute zero (0 Kelvin) while Celsius starts at the freezing point of water (0 degrees Celsius). So, 270 Celsius is not warmer than 270 Kelvin.
200 kelvin is much colder than 0 degrees F (200 kelvin = -99.67 F).
One Kelvin is exactly equal to one Celsius degree, and to 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees. At any temperature, the Celsius number is 273.15 less than the Kelvin number. Getting the Fahrenheit number is slightly more complicated than that.
No, Kelvin is not more than Fahrenheit. In fact, 0 Kelvin is equal to -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit.
A one degree change in temperature on the Celsius scale is equal to a one unit temperature change on the Kelvin scale. The two scales have the same size degrees, but the Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, which is -273.15 degrees Celsius.
400 K is higher than 300F. To convert Fahrenheit to Kelvin, you would first convert Fahrenheit to Celsius and then to Kelvin. So, 400 K is higher than 300F.
1 Kelvin "degree" is the same as a "degree" in Celsius. The two scales just have different starting points. So 1 Kelvin degree is the same temperature interval as 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees. (The actual temperature 1°K is equal to -272.15°C or -457.87°F )
Yes. In all temperature scales in current use (Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin), larger numbers mean hotter temperatures.
Kelvin and Celsius are almost the same, except the Kelvin scale is 273.15 degrees higher. So zero degree Kelvin (absolute zero) is the same as -273.15 C and 273.15 K is 0 C (freezing point of water). As for Fahrenheit, the freezing point is 32 degrees higher than Celsius, and there are 9 Fahrenheit degrees for every 5 Celsius degrees. So to convert from between Fahrenheit and Celsius: F = C * 9/5 + 32 C = (F - 32) * 5/9 Or if you prefer working with decimals: F = C * 1.8 + 32 C = (F-32) / 1.8
No, Celsius and Fahrenheit are just different scales for measuring temperature. A temperature in Celsius can be the same as, or warmer than, a temperature in Fahrenheit, depending on the specific values being compared.