Zero degrees Centigrade is the same a 32 degrees Fahrenheit, both mark the freezing point. Therefore 0 degrees Fahrenheit would be much colder than 0 degrees Centigrade.
93.2
It is: 9/5*(9.9)+32 = 49.82 degrees Fahrenheit
It is: 9/5*(11.5)+32 = 52.7 degrees Fahrenheit
3
-3 degrees Fahrenheit is colder.
The Fahrenheit equivalent to zero degrees Centigrade is 32. Centigrade is another name for Celsius, and zero Celsius is the same as zero centigrade.
20 degrees Fahrenheit = -6.67 degrees Celsius therefore 200F is colder
32 F
No, it is zero degrees Celsius/Centigrade, which is 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 F
That's not a zero. The small circle is the symbol for "degree."
Sub-zero is anything that is less than zero. That means that-1 degree, -2 degrees, -3 degrees, etc. are all 'sub-zero'. To be complete, you also have to specify whether you are talking centigrade or Fahrenheit. When centigrade, it just means the same as below freezing (0 degrees centigrade). When Fahrenheit, sub zero is starting to be seriously cold since freezing is +32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sub-zero is anything that is less than zero. That means that-1 degree, -2 degrees, -3 degrees, etc. are all 'sub-zero'. To be complete, you also have to specify whether you are talking centigrade or Fahrenheit. When centigrade, it just means the same as below freezing (0 degrees centigrade). When Fahrenheit, sub zero is starting to be seriously cold since freezing is +32 degrees Fahrenheit.
If you mean the air around them is 0 degrees, then the steel would be colder.
-6 Fahrenheit is colder. It is below zero.
zero degrees Fahrenheit -18 degrees Centigrade John Rodosevich, P.E.
No, -80 F is 10 degrees colder than -70 F because it is farther below zero.