273.15 k
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The freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius and 273.15 Kelvin, while the boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius and 373.15 Kelvin. This means that the difference between freezing and boiling points is 100 degrees Celsius or 100 kelvins.
Converting degrees Celsius to Kelvin involves adding 273.15 to the temperature in Celsius. So the freezing temperature is 273.15 K, and boiling is 373.15 K.
Assuming you are referring to pure water at sea level, the freezing point is 273.15K, and the boiling point is 373.15K.
the freezing point of water on the Celsius scale = 0 DegreeThe Celsius scale was actually based off of the boiling and freezing points of water. Water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius [32 degrees Fahrenheit (273.15 degrees Kelvin)] and boils at 100 degrees Celsius[212 degrees Fahrenheit ( degrees 373.15 Kelvin)].Here are the conversions:(F for Fahrenheit, C for Celsius, K for Kelvin)Fahrenheit to Celsius: F-32*5/9=CCelsius to Fahrenheit: C*9/5+32=FFahrenheit to Kelvin: (F-32)*5/9-273.15=KKelvin to Fahrenheit: (K+273.15)*9/5+32=FCelsius to Kelvin: C-273.15=KKelvin to Celsius: K+273.15=CNote: The boiling and freezing points are based on sea level. The boiling point of water increases by 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit per 500 feet of elevation; the freezing point is barely affected as it doesn't deal with gas molecules like boiling does, and the elevation affects it because of lessened air pressure.newtest3what about the boiling point????
Temperature is typically measured in degrees Celsius (°C) or Kelvin (K) in the metric system.
The temperature scale used in the metric system is Celsius. It is based on the freezing and boiling points of water, with 0 degrees Celsius as the freezing point and 100 degrees Celsius as the boiling point at sea level.
There are 180 degrees Fahrenheit between the boiling point (212°F) and freezing point (32°F) of water on the Fahrenheit scale.
Celsius is a measurement of temperature. Celsius takes the freezing point of water and the boiling point of water, and divides the temperature difference into 100 equal degrees, calling freezing zero, and boiling one hundred. The same sized degrees are used to extend the scale below zero and above one hundred. The SI unit of temperature is the kelvin. the kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, and the units are the same size as degrees celsius, so the freezing point of water is 273.16K. Measurements in kelvin are not called degrees.