No. A hunder degrees C spans the same range as 180 degrees F. So a C degree is 1.8 times as large as a F degree.
The size of a "degree" on the Kelvin scale is identical to the size of a Celsius degree. So a change (up or down) of 1°C is the same as a change of 1 Kelvin. The size of a Fahrenheit degree is much smaller. A change of 1°C (up or down) is the same as a change of 1.8° on the Fahrenheit scale. Example : 10° C = 283.15 K = 50° F 11° C = 284.15 K = 51.8° F
Minus 40. You can obtain this by using the conversion formula, for example, F = (9/5)C + 32, setting F = C (that is, replacing the F with C, or the other way round), and solving.
The range 120°F to 160°F is about 48.9°C to 71.1°C (One degree Celsius is the same range as 9/5 of a degree Fahrenheit)
c
No. A hunder degrees C spans the same range as 180 degrees F. So a C degree is 1.8 times as large as a F degree.
88 b/c 4x22=88 8x11=88 and88x1=88
30 c - I have the same problem 'cept to a greater degree 32f equating to 34e
The size of a "degree" on the Kelvin scale is identical to the size of a Celsius degree. So a change (up or down) of 1°C is the same as a change of 1 Kelvin. The size of a Fahrenheit degree is much smaller. A change of 1°C (up or down) is the same as a change of 1.8° on the Fahrenheit scale. Example : 10° C = 283.15 K = 50° F 11° C = 284.15 K = 51.8° F
88 fl.oz = 11 cups
88 constellations in the sky
Minus 40. You can obtain this by using the conversion formula, for example, F = (9/5)C + 32, setting F = C (that is, replacing the F with C, or the other way round), and solving.
The range 120°F to 160°F is about 48.9°C to 71.1°C (One degree Celsius is the same range as 9/5 of a degree Fahrenheit)
A change of one degree Celsius indicates the same temperature change as a change of (B) one Kelvin. (Isn't it easier to say that Kelvins are the same size as Celsius degrees ?)
c
88/9 C
88 Fahrenheit is equivalent to approximately 31 degrees Celsius.