If you mean "What temperatures appear on both scales ?", then the answer
is "All of them".
If you mean "What temperature is the same number on both the Kelvin
and Fahrenheit scales ?", then that's a very nice little problem.
I get 574.25 F and 574.25 K as being the same temperature.
The lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale is -273.15 degrees Celsius. The lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale is 0 degrees Kelvin. Therefore the only temperature scale on which -460 degrees is possible is the Fahrenheit scale.
297 Kelvins
There are four units for temperature: Celsius, Kelvin, Fahrenheit, and Rankine. The Kelvin scale is the same as the Celsius scale, just with the zero point being absolute zero. The Rankine scale is the same thing for the Fahrenheit scale. ■
It is an absolute measurement scale of temperature. 0K is absolute zero there are no negative units on the scale (degrees centigrade [celsius] + 273 = degrees Kelvin). This also is the case on the Rankine temperature scale (degrees fahrenheit +459.69 = degrees Rankine)
39 °C is equal to 102.2 °F and 312.15 KThe conversion formula is Fahrenheit temperature = (9/5 x Celsius temperature)+ 32The Kelvin temperature = Celsius temperature plus 273.15(the Kelvin scale has its zero point at absolute zero or -273.15 °C)
Fahrenheit and Celsius and sometimes Kelvin
Yes, Kelvin is one scale for measuring temperature, like Celsius of Fahrenheit.
Celsius, Fahrenheit and Kelvin
Celsius, kelvin, Fahrenheit
The lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale is -273.15 degrees Celsius. The lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale is 0 degrees Kelvin. Therefore the only temperature scale on which -460 degrees is possible is the Fahrenheit scale.
The SI scale for temperature is Kelvin, which you can get by subtracting 273,15 from the Celsius scale.
310.15 K
No but they can be converted.
The two most common temperature scales are the Fahrenheit scale and the Celsius scale. However, the Kelvin scale is also used, primarily in science, to prevent negative temperatures.
Kelvin scale Celsius scale Fahrenheit scale
The temperature scale that has no negative values is the Kelvin scale, because it has its zero point at the lowest possible measurable temperature (absolute zero).The similarly based scale using Fahrenheit intervals (degrees) is the Rankine scale. The Kelvin scale starts at (the minimum) absolute zero. (0 K = -273 oC)
Celsius, kelvin, Fahrenheit