Did you mean "Fahrenheit and Celsius"? In that case, -40.
At a temperature of -40 (minus forty) degrees, the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales read the same number.
Celsius is colder than Fahrenheit for the same temperature. For example, 0 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
neg 40
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.
At -40 on each scale.
Pre-calculus refers to concepts that need to be learned before, or as a prerequisite to studying calculus, so no. First one studies pre-calculus then elementary calculus.
Above -40, a number in Celsius is hotter than the same number in Fahrenheit.
-40o C
Any time the Fahrenheit temperature is below (minus 40), the Celsius number for the same temperature is higher.
No. 37° F is the same temperature as 2.7° C. 37° C is the same temperature as 98.6° F. For any number above -40, the Celsius is warmer than the Fahrenheit. For any number below -40, the Celsius is cooler than the Fahrenheit.
negative 40 degrees
-40c (apex)