1. 1°F is more than 1°C.
Answers
Answer:
A one-degree change in temperature on the Celsius temperature scale is equal to a one-unit temperature change on the Kelvin temperature scale. ... A change in temperature of 1 Celsius degree is greater than a temperature change of 1 Fahrenheit degree because a Celsius degree is larger than a Fahrenheit degree.
Explanation:
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Explanation:
The ‘rise’ in temperature in both cases is the same. Only the units of measurement changes. In fact, there is another unit of temperature used by scientists - KELVIN.
Celsius denotes a scale of temperature on which water freezes at 0° and boils at 100° at sea level and standard atmospheric pressure.
Fahrenheit denotes the temperature at which water freezes into ice at 32 °F, and the boiling point of water is 212 °F, at sea level and standard atmospheric pressure.
Kelvin is the Standard International ( SI ) unit of thermodynamic temperature. One Kelvin is formally defined as 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of pure water. (The temperature and pressure at which a substance can exist in equilibrium in the liquid, solid, and gaseous states. The triple point of pure water is at 0.01°C - 273.16K - 32.01°F).
For example, if there is a rise in temperature from 20°C to 21°C the corresponding Fahrenheit scale would show an increase of 68°F to 69.80°F and in the Kelvin scale it would be 293.15K to 294.15K. In other words, if it is a one degree rise in the Celsius scale, it would be a 1.80° rise in the Fahrenheit scale.
So as you can see, we can measure the temperature in different units as needed, but the rise in temperature remains unchanged.
On the other hand, if we compare a 1° rise in Celsius scale with a 1° rise in the Fahrenheit scale, then the Celsius scale is warmer. From 20°C to 21°C the corresponding Fahrenheit reading is 69.80 but the rise is only we are rising it only from 68°F to 69°F corresponding to 20.5556°C therefore, 20 to 21°C is 0.4556°C warmer than 68°F to 69°F.
Interestingly, -40°C is equal to -40°F