Wiki User
∙ 12y agoSince you're working with the same units of measurement for all of your readings, you can just place them on a number line.
-7 < -5 < 0 < 2
-7C is the coldest of these four.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoThe difference is 8 degrees Celsius: -5° C is 8° lower than +3° C+3 - (-5) = +3 + 5 = 8On the thermometer it 'moves down' 8° (from +3 to 0 it moved 3, then from 0 to -5 it moved 5 more:+3+2+10-1-2-3-4-58 celsius degrees
celsius
Assuming that degrese is you fail at spelling degreese and that celceus is a fail for Celsius, 6 degrees less than 2 degrees Celsius is four degrees Celsius below zero.
The difference between two degrees on the Celsius scale is equal to (9 / 5) x 2 = 3.6 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. For example, 20 degrees Celsius is equal to 68 degrees Fahrenheit, while 22 degrees Celsius is equal to 71.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Similarly, a temperature decrease of 2 degrees Celsius would equal a difference of 3.6 Fahrenheit. 18 degrees Celsius is equal to 64.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
28.4 degrees Fahrenheit
Yes, -19 degrees Celsius is colder than -4 degrees Celsius. The larger the negative number, the colder the temperature.
Yes, 2 degrees Celsius is colder than 6 degrees Celsius. The difference between the two temperatures is 4 degrees.
Yes, -12 degrees Celsius is colder than -2 degrees Celsius. The farther the temperature is below zero, the colder it is.
No, 8 degrees Celsius is actually warmer than 2 degrees Celsius.
275 Kelvin is colder because it is equivalent to 2 degrees Celsius, which is lower than 5 degrees Celsius.
3
2
35°C = 95°F 35°F = 2°C 35° Fahrenheit is much cooler. * * * * * F is cooler for temperatures down to minus 40 degrees (C or F). Below that the Celsius temp is colder.
About -2 -0 as the snow will not melt and not be to hard to throw at people
If you mean the temperature inside a freezer, these are usually around -18 to -19 degrees celsius or 0 to -2 degrees Fahrenheit
8 degrees Celsius is warmer than 2 degrees Celsius.
20° F is 12 Fahrenheit degrees and (6 and 2/3) Celsius degrees colder than the freezing point of water.