Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance. It indicates how hot or cold an object is. The base unit of temperature in the International System of Units (SI) is the kelvin (K), though Celsius (°C) and Fahrenheit (°F) are commonly used in everyday applications.
1 °C = 98.6 °F
1 °F = -0.465 °C
Example:
Convert 15 Normal Human Temperature to Fahrenheit:
15 °C = 1,031 °F
| Normal Human Temperature | Fahrenheit |
|---|---|
| 0.01 °C | 32.666 °F |
| 0.1 °C | 38.66 °F |
| 1 °C | 98.6 °F |
| 2 °C | 165.2 °F |
| 3 °C | 231.8 °F |
| 5 °C | 365 °F |
| 10 °C | 698 °F |
| 20 °C | 1,364 °F |
| 30 °C | 2,030 °F |
| 40 °C | 2,696 °F |
| 50 °C | 3,362 °F |
| 60 °C | 4,028 °F |
| 70 °C | 4,694 °F |
| 80 °C | 5,360 °F |
| 90 °C | 6,026 °F |
| 100 °C | 6,692 °F |
| 250 °C | 16,682 °F |
| 500 °C | 33,332 °F |
| 750 °C | 49,982 °F |
| 1000 °C | 66,632 °F |
| 10000 °C | 666,032 °F |
| 100000 °C | 6,660,032 °F |