1 degree on the Celsius scale is equal to 1.8 degress on the Fahrenheit scale...that is, one Celsius degree covers more temperaure range than one Fahrenheit degree. It is somewhat like using a long measuring stick or a short measuring stick to measure the same distance. In one case you will have more sticks, in the other case, fewer, but the distance is still the same. The systems were devised by different people in different places to measure the same thing. There are at least two other "measuring sticks" for temperature - Kelvin and Rankin, used mostly for scientific measurements. If you want to know an actual temperature comparison you will have to use the formulas: F = 9/5C + 32 or C = 5/9F - 32
It means having the same value is to be equivalent as for example 1/2 has the same value as 2/4 because they are both equivalent fractions.
An equivalent expression.
No.
direct variation or positive correlation.
the temperature where Fahrenheit and Celsius scale show the same numeric value is - 40
The temperature that has the same value in both Celsius and Fahrenheit scales is -40 degrees.
Minus 40
-40
At -40 Celsius and Fahrenheit are the same temperature.
The temperature at which Celsius and Fahrenheit are the same is -40 degrees.
Negative 40 degrees is the temperature that will be the same on Fahrenheit and Celsius scales.
The temperature -40 degrees is the same value in both Celsius and Fahrenheit scales.
The temperature - 40 °C is equal to -40 °F. This is the only temperature at which the two scales (Celsius and Fahrenheit) have the same numerical value.
-40 degrees is the temperature at which the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales converge.
Celsius and Fahrenheit have the same temperature at -40 degrees, as it is the point where the two temperature scales intersect. Below -40 degrees, the Celsius temperature is lower than its Fahrenheit equivalent.
The temperature at which Celsius and Fahrenheit are equal is -40 degrees.