Because the Kelvin scale is an absolute scale. In the context of thermodynamics, 2 K is twice as "hot" as 1 K. And 3 K is three times as "hot". That is not true of the Celsius or Fahrenheit (or other temperature) scales.
To the extent that the question does not contain its own answer, I'm uncertain what you're trying to ask. K is a common abbreviation for 1000 (or, in computer science, 1024) so it could be the numeric part multiplied by one or the other of those factors.In computer science, 200000 K-whatevers would be about 200 M-whatevers, or 0.2 G-whatevers. "About" because there's some ambiguity over whether the 1000 or 1024 definition is what's being used.In terms of temperature, "really really hot." "Orders of magnitude hotter than the surface of the Sun (which is about 6000 K)" type hot, but not quite as hot as the core of the Sun, which is well over ten million K.
It could be, if it is a regular stick arrow then no.
k^2 + k = k^2 + k k^2 x k = k^3
Interval Data: Temperature, Dates (data that has has an arbitrary zero) Ratio Data: Height, Weight, Age, Length (data that has an absolute zero) Nominal Data: Male, Female, Race, Political Party (categorical data that cannot be ranked) Ordinal Data: Degree of Satisfaction at Restaurant (data that can be ranked)
the get kinda hot cool them with warm water though k
burning!
knot
K. Edson has written: 'WORD for the Mac hot tips'
One could find more information about K-Cups Hot Cocoa from Keurig's official website. K-Cups Hot Cocoa is one of the many top-sellers on the official Keurig website.
5,780 k (5,510 °c.)
It is approx 5,000 K.
5,700 K.
Yes there is it is at k mart
K-Cup machines were made to quickly brew a cup of coffee, hot chocolate, tea, and other hot drinks. K-Cups are put into machines and the beverage is ready within a minute.
The surface of the sun is 5780 K.
No, she is not! and it's '(K)rystal (J)ung' capital K capital J