Temperature conversion/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Daniel Mietchen (started) |
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{{r|Celsius (unit)}} | |||
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Revision as of 17:37, 12 December 2009
- See also changes related to Temperature conversion, or pages that link to Temperature conversion or to this page or whose text contains "Temperature conversion".
Parent topics
- Temperature [r]: A fundamental quantity in physics - describes how warm or cold a system is. [e]
- Quantity [r]: A mathematical concept that refers to a certain number of identical units of an observed group of units, e.g., a certain amount of apples in a fruit basket. [e]
- Unit [r]: A basic quantity, multiples or parts of which are used to express other measured quantities. [e]
- Unit conversion [r]: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
- Conversion table [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Celsius (unit) [r]: Unit of temperature, defined by a scale in which the melting point of water is set to zero, and the temperature difference between the melting and the boiling points to 100. [e]
- Kelvin (unit) [r]: Unit of temperature, with 0 degrees set to absolute zero and the difference between the melting and boiling points of water being 100 degrees, as with Celsius; one of the seven SI base units. [e]
- Fahrenheit (unit) [r]: A unit of temperature, defined by the melting point of water being at 32 degrees (°F), and the temperature difference between the melting and the boiling points to 180. [e]
- Rankine (unit) [r]: A unit of temperature, defined by absolute zero being at 0 degrees (°R), with 1°R being equal to 1°F (Fahrenheit), i.e. the temperature difference between the melting and the boiling points of water is set to 180. [e]
- Réaumur (unit) [r]: A unit of temperature, defined by the melting point of water being at 0 degrees (°Re) and the normal boiling point of water at 80 °Re. [e]