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 °R = -218.076 °Re
1 °Re = 493.92 °R
Example:
Convert 15 Rankine to Reaumur:
15 °R = -211.853 °Re
| Rankine | Reaumur |
|---|---|
| 0.01 °R | -218.516 °Re |
| 0.1 °R | -218.476 °Re |
| 1 °R | -218.076 °Re |
| 2 °R | -217.631 °Re |
| 3 °R | -217.187 °Re |
| 5 °R | -216.298 °Re |
| 10 °R | -214.076 °Re |
| 20 °R | -209.631 °Re |
| 30 °R | -205.187 °Re |
| 40 °R | -200.742 °Re |
| 50 °R | -196.298 °Re |
| 60 °R | -191.853 °Re |
| 70 °R | -187.409 °Re |
| 80 °R | -182.964 °Re |
| 90 °R | -178.52 °Re |
| 100 °R | -174.076 °Re |
| 250 °R | -107.409 °Re |
| 500 °R | 3.702 °Re |
| 750 °R | 114.813 °Re |
| 1000 °R | 225.924 °Re |
| 10000 °R | 4,225.924 °Re |
| 100000 °R | 44,225.924 °Re |