While it is true that as you go higher above sea level, the temperature drops, you can't say that at a certain height it is always going to be -15 degrees celcius.
Just as temperatures fluctuate at sea level, they fluctuate at higher heights as well.
The approximate height of the stratopause is between 50 to 55 km. The temperature is about negative15 degrees Celsius or 5 degrees Fahrenheit.
120 degrees.
42 inches from ground to bottom of the mail box.
radio altimeter
6 feet
Use this equation to convert degrees Fahrenheit (ºF) to degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC): [°C] = ([°F] - 32) × 0.556
The approximate height of the stratopause is between 50 to 55 km. The temperature is about negative15 degrees Celsius or 5 degrees Fahrenheit.
At day we have 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) and at night we have 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit). The temperature difference between day and night is 10 degrees Celsius or 18 degrees Fahrenheit.
No. Height can't be converted to temperature. If it could, then sooner or later you'd hear about a new Olympic record in the warm jump.
It's spelt Fahrenheit, and said (FAH-RIN-HEIGHT)-it's a unit of temperature measurement, like Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit=0 degrees Celsius). Celsius is a newer version (1744 vs. 1724). Each degree change in Celsius is equal to 1.8 degrees in Fahrenheit.
There are 33.8 Fahrenheit degrees in one Celsius degree.
It's easy to convert from Celsius to Fahrenheit by yourself. Tf = (9/5)*Tc+32, where Tc = temperature in degrees Celsius, Tf = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. 38.2 C is 101 F.
10o Celsius
Subtract 32 and then multiply result by 5/9
Volume is measured in 3 dimensions. e.g. Height x width x depth. 2.50 x 10 has no volume - it is a rectangle.
As the altitude increases in the Troposphere, The air temperature decreases. When about 1 kilometer increases in altitude, the air cools about 6.5 degrees Celsius. And at the very top of the Troposphere the air temperature stays the same at around -60 degrees Celsius.
As the altitude increases in the Troposphere, The air temperature decreases. When about 1 kilometer increases in altitude, the air cools about 6.5 degrees Celsius. And at the very top of the Troposphere the air temperature stays the same at around -60 degrees Celsius.