75.2 degrees Fahrenheit
No. For temperatures, 45°C is much hotter than 45°F (equal to 7.22°C). Likewise, a change in temperature of 45 "degrees" on the Celsius scale is a much larger change than 45 "degrees" on the Fahrenheit scale. The Fahrenheit "degrees" are smaller intervals. Technically the numbers have the same value, but on different scales.
65 degrees Fahrenheit is 18.3 degrees Celsius.
(-400) degrees Fahrenheit = -240 degrees Celsius
In the Fahrenheit scale, 81o is a warm summer day. In the Celsius scale it is a lot hotter (the weather on Earth never gets that hot, and we would be in very serious trouble if it did).
50 degrees is hotter on the Celsius scale, as 50 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 122 degrees Fahrenheit.
50 degrees hotter is greater on the Fahrenheit scale because each degree on the Fahrenheit scale is smaller than each degree on the Celsius scale, making the difference more significant in Fahrenheit.
50 degrees is hotter on the Celsius scale. In Fahrenheit, 50 degrees is equivalent to around 10 degrees.
A change of 50 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to a change of 27.8 degrees Celsius. Therefore, 50 degrees Fahrenheit is hotter than 50 degrees Celsius.
50 degrees Celsius is hotter than 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
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.
The temperature scale is relative, but typically lava from a volcano is hotter than boiling water. The temperature of lava can reach about 1,300 to 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit, while boiling water is at 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
No. It's just six degrees hotter. The relationship is additive, not multiplicative. They are points on a continuous scale and not discrete countable quantities like eight objects.
That's wrong. That's not how you convert temperatures between Celsius and Fahrenheit.
300 Kelvin is hotter than both 90 degrees Fahrenheit and 40 degrees Celsius. Kelvin is an absolute temperature scale where 0 Kelvin represents absolute zero, the coldest temperature possible. 300 Kelvin is equivalent to 80.33 degrees Fahrenheit and 26.85 degrees Celsius.
No, the Celsius scale is not larger than the Fahrenheit scale. The Celsius scale is based on water freezing at 0 degrees and boiling at 100 degrees, while the Fahrenheit scale has a freezing point of 32 degrees and a boiling point of 212 degrees.
50 celsius Hotter on Celsius Scale