To convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius you use the equation (F-32.0) x (5/9) = Celsius. So when you plug 108 in for F:
(108-32) x (5/9) = 42.2
If you meant 108 degrees Kelvin to Celsius you use the equation C + 273 = K where C. Plugging in 108 for K we get:
C + 273 = 108 -> C = -165
A one degree rise on the Celsius scale is bigger. A one degree rise on the Celsius scale is 1.8 rise on Fahrenheit scale.
average -108 degrees Celsius
No. Fahrenheit to Celsius is figured out by this equation: C=(F-32) x 5/9 AND Celsius to Fahrenheit uses this equation: F=(9/5 x C) + 32 No, 1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.22 degrees Celsius
-6 degrees Celsius is colder; it is farther from zero than -4 degrees.
No. On the Celsius scale, the degree intervals are 1.8 times as large, so that a Celsius "degree" and a Fahrenheit "degree" are not the same thing. (see related question)
108ºF = 42.2ºC
108 Fahrenheit is 42.2 Celsius
108 degrees Fahrenheit = 42.2 degrees Celsius.
108 degrees Fahrenheit = 42.22 degrees Celsius
= (108 - 32 ) / 1.8 = 42.2 in celsius
78 degrees Fahrenheit is approximately 25.6 degrees Celsius. This conversion can be calculated using the formula: Celsius = (Fahrenheit - 32) / 1.8.
There is no difference between "degree Celsius" and "-degree Celsius." Both terminologies refer to the unit of temperature measurement known as Celsius, which is commonly used in scientific and everyday applications. The hyphen in "-degree Celsius" is not necessary and may be a typographical error.
35 degree Celsius = 95 degree Fahrenheit 35 degree Celsius = 554.67 degree Rankine 35 degree Celsius = 28 degree Reaumur 35 degree Celsius = 308.15 kelvin
108 degrees Celsius is equal to 226.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
108 degrees Fahrenheit is approximately 42.2 degrees Celsius.
no difference
No difference.