0 C = 273.15 Kelvin
200 C = 473.15 Kelvin
1 atm/273.15 K = Xatm/473.15 K
273.15X = 473.15
X = 1.7 atmospheres of pressure
---------------------------------------------( can call it 2 atm )
you always add on 180 degrees
There is no correlation between degrees and metres. They are totally different measurements so no conversion is possible.
convert degrees to meters
Assuming standard atmospheric pressure, 2260 kilojoules.
they both measure the angle in degrees
One foot of water at 4 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 816.2 feet of air at 15 degrees C.
You can't. Celsius per mmHg is a relationship of temperature to pressure. You can however solve for temperature if you have the value of pressure (e.g. if P= 10 mmHg and V/P = 2 ºC/mmHgthen V= (2 ºC/mmHg)(10 mmHg) = 20 ºC). If you have more information in the problem you might be referring to Gay-Lussac's Law, which compares two values of pressure and temperature to show the relationship (GL'sL: P1/T1 = P2/T2 ... but that would be pressure per unit volume). I'm not sure what you are looking for exactly, but you can't convert temp. to pressure (just like you can't convert feet to lbs.).
1.8 x C + 32 = F
you always add on 180 degrees
There is no correlation between degrees and metres. They are totally different measurements so no conversion is possible.
There is no relationship between the two. One is a measure of an angle and the other is a measure of how hot something is (this is not the same as heat). They just happen to have the same name.
convert degrees to meters
Assuming standard atmospheric pressure, 2260 kilojoules.
somewhere between 1000 to 4000 degrees Celsius.
Multiply the radians by 180/PI to convert to degrees.
There is no relationship between degrees(which is an angle or temperarure) and pounds which is a weight or currrency) . They are two totally different things)
The relationship is that they are supplementary angles because angles on a straight line add up to 180 degrees