Why not use the formula to convert from Celsius to Fahrenheit (or the other way round), to convert both temperatures to the same scale. Then you can easily compare them.
-40 f=-40 c
If C is Celsius temperature and F is the Fahrenheit temperature, the relation between them is: F=(9/5)C+32 You can graph that into a linear function. And since the line y=x (this is when y is Celsius) and y=(9/5)x+32 (this is when y is Fahrenheit) have different slopes, they are going to meet once on the graph. (Different slopes mean they are not parallel and only parallel lines don't meet each other in a 2D. And the point they meet is the point where C and F are equal. And if the temperature is hotter than that, F>C, and if the temperature is colder than that, C>F) x=(9/5)x+32 So x=-40 (C=-40, F=-40) Therefore if it's hotter than -40°C (or -40°F), Fahrenheit is bigger than Celsius (when it's the same amount of heat). And if it's colder than -40°C (or -40°F), Celsius is bigger than Fahrenheit (when it's the same amount of heat)
0 C = 32 F 100 C = 212 F 180 degrees F equals the measurement of 100 degrees C 9 degrees F therefore equals 5 degrees C -40 F is 72 degrees F below freezing -40 C is 40 degrees C below freezing Convert F to C 5 times -72 is -360 divided by 9 is -40 C convert C to F 9 times -40 is -360 divided by 5 is -40 F
Neither is hotter. They are different scales and use different measurements for heat. 25C is hotter than 25F, but they are different temperatures.
(-40) degrees Fahrenheit = -40 degrees Celsius.
92°C is hotter. 92°C = 197.6°F
104o F and 40o C are the same temperature.
50 C is hotter than 50 F.Minus 40 C and minus 40 F are the same temperature.Below minus 40, any C is colder than the same F.Above minus 40, any C is hotter than the same F.
-40°F = -40°C
it is hotter on Celsius. 50 C = 122 F but 50 F = 10 C. the formula for this is (C X 1.8) + 32 to convert from C to F and F to C is (F-32)/1.8
100 C is the same as 212 f what?
-40 f=-40 c
30 C is hotter than 30 F
100 Celsius is hotter than 100 Fahrenheit...100 C = 212 F or 100 F = 37.78 C
It is not! Below -40 degrees (where C and F are the same), x deg Celsius is colder than x deg F, while above -40 deg Celsius is hotter. Just because you are used to temperatures above -40 degrees does not mean that what happens below that temperature can be ignored.
If C is Celsius temperature and F is the Fahrenheit temperature, the relation between them is: F=(9/5)C+32 You can graph that into a linear function. And since the line y=x (this is when y is Celsius) and y=(9/5)x+32 (this is when y is Fahrenheit) have different slopes, they are going to meet once on the graph. (Different slopes mean they are not parallel and only parallel lines don't meet each other in a 2D. And the point they meet is the point where C and F are equal. And if the temperature is hotter than that, F>C, and if the temperature is colder than that, C>F) x=(9/5)x+32 So x=-40 (C=-40, F=-40) Therefore if it's hotter than -40°C (or -40°F), Fahrenheit is bigger than Celsius (when it's the same amount of heat). And if it's colder than -40°C (or -40°F), Celsius is bigger than Fahrenheit (when it's the same amount of heat)
The melting point of coconut milk is 97-104 °F (36-40 °C).