Currently the highest temperature is 1.416785(71) × 1032 Kelvin. If you subtract 273.15 from it though, to turn it into celcius, it's still going to be the same number, since it's so big. so 1.416785(71) x 1032 celsius is absolute hot.
The Celsius scale is not absolute. It has no absolute value.
One Celsius is 274.15 degrees absolute (or K).
The difference is 17 Celsius degrees. Mathematically, the difference is NOT 17 degrees Celsius since the scale is not an absolute one.
-273.15+600=326.85 degrees celsius
pretty hot it is 50 degrees Celsius higher then boiling water
The Celsius scale is not absolute. It has no absolute value.
Absolute zero is -273.15 degrees Celsius and -459.7 degrees Fahrenheit. Kelvin = degrees Celsius + 273.15
18 degrees of the Celsius (or absolute) scale
-12 degrees Celsius is 261.15 degrees absolute (Kelvin).
4,666 degrees Celsius is extremely hot. 4,666 degrees Celsius is equal to 8,430.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
89 degrees Celsius is hot because water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
Absolute zero or zero degrees kelvin is equal to -273.16 degrees Celsius.
One Celsius is 274.15 degrees absolute (or K).
57.8 degrees Celsius.
No. It is hotter. However, it is not twice as hot since the Celsius scale is not absolute - Kelvin is the absolute scale for temperature.
Minus 273.15 degrees Celsius.
The difference is 17 Celsius degrees. Mathematically, the difference is NOT 17 degrees Celsius since the scale is not an absolute one.