Fahrenheit, Celsius and Kelvin.
Celsius is the metric measurement for temperature.
The SI unit of measurement for temperature is the kelvin(K). Celsius is not an SI unit (it is a metric unit), but may be used alongside it.
If you are measuring temperature, the unit of measurement is either Fahrenheit or Centigrade. If you are measuring height, the unit of measurement could be feet and inches or meters and so on.
Fahrenheit.
The SI measurement unit for temperature is the Kelvin (K).
Enthalpy is the measurement of heat, Joule (J) is the unit. Temperature is not a measurement of heat. Temperature has the unit Kelvin (K) or Celsius (oC)
Enthalpy is the measurement of heat, Joule (J) is the unit. Temperature is not a measurement of heat. Temperature has the unit Kelvin (K) or Celsius (oC)
Fahrenheit is a unit of measurement of temperature. It is neither good nor bad in itself, but as a unit of measurement, may not be the most appropriate unit of measurement based on context.
A unit of measurement of temperature, of which the most common three are:degrees Celsius (oC)degrees Fahrenheit (oF)Kelvin (K)
Kelvin is used as a measurement unit for temperature in all countries around the world. It is the base unit of temperature in the International System of Units (SI).
A correct temperature measurement should include the unit of measurement (e.g. degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit), the value of the temperature read, the location or context in which the measurement was taken, and the date and time of the measurement.
Fahrenheit, Celsius and Kelvin.
Celsius is the metric measurement for temperature.
The international unit of measurement for thermodynamic temperature is the Kelvin (K). It is based on the absolute zero point, where all molecular motion ceases, making it a fundamental unit in thermodynamics and physics.
The "c" stands for degrees Celsius, which is a unit of temperature measurement on the Celsius scale. It is used in many countries as the standard unit for temperature.
That depends what you want to measure about the gas: its volume, mass, transparency, temperature, etc. The really isn't such a thing as a "unit of measurement of gas", there are units of measurement for mass, volume, temperature, etc., all of which can be attributes of a specific gas.