1 Fahrenheit degree = 5/9 of one Celsius degrees
1 Celsius degree = 1.8 Fahrenheit degree
There is no constant ratio between the °F and °C numbers for the same temperature,
because their zeros are at different temperatures.
A Celsius number less than -40° is colder than the same Fahrenheit number.
A Celsius number more than -40° is warmer than the same Fahrenheit number.
And -40° is the same actual temperature in both °F and °C.
No. It can be but need not be. For example, you might calculate the ratio of today's temperature in Celsius and in Fahrenheit and calculate the ratio. That is not a rate.
400 Fahrenheit = 204.4 Celsius 400 Celsius = 752 Fahrenheit
Fahrenheit = (Celsius * 1.8) + 32 Celsius = (Fahrenheit - 32) / 1.8
(Celsius x 1.8)+32= Fahrenheit (Fahrenheit-32)/1.8= Celsius
108 Fahrenheit is 42.2 Celsius
32 to zero
No. It can be but need not be. For example, you might calculate the ratio of today's temperature in Celsius and in Fahrenheit and calculate the ratio. That is not a rate.
To convert a Celsius temperature to Fahrenheit, you simply multiply it by 9, divide that by 5, and then add 32. In algebraic terms, the formula is (C*9/5)+32 = F, where C is the temperature in Celsius and F is the temperature in Fahrenheit. The formula to convert Fahrenheit to Celsius is simply the reverse. You subtract 32, multiply by 5, and then divide by 9. The formula for that is (F-32)5/9 = C, where F is the temperature in Fahrenheit and C is the temperature in Celsius.
Temperature Fahrenheit = Temperature Celsius(1.80) + 32 This conversion, correcting for the difference is scale ratio (1 : 1.8 ), is the reason why these temps are the same.
By comparative size, each "Celsius degree" represents 1.8 times as much change in temperature as a "Fahrenheit degree." However, the two scales cannot be directly compared because they have different beginning points: 0° Celsius is at the freezing point of water, while 0° Fahrenheit is the freezing point of brine (32 Fahrenheit degrees lower).
(Celsius x 1.8)+32= Fahrenheit (Fahrenheit-32)/1.8= Celsius
Fahrenheit = (Celsius * 1.8) + 32 Celsius = (Fahrenheit - 32) / 1.8
400 Fahrenheit = 204.4 Celsius 400 Celsius = 752 Fahrenheit
It happens to be -40 Celsius too.
20 degrees Celsius = 68 degrees Fahrenheit 30 degrees Celsius = 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
Anders Celsius created the Celsius scale in 1742, and Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit developed the Fahrenheit scale in 1724.
101.5 degrees Fahrenheit = 38.61 degrees Celsius.