savage_demmigod · 3 years ago
Well I would just convert it to the other and then work that out. So if it were 0' Celsius then I'd convert it to Fahrenheit since they're different which would give me numbers to work with. You could then work that out and convert it back
karlboll · 3 years ago
I tried to work it out in Excel but the screen went black and now my computer's trying to eat my desk.
funkmasterrex · 3 years ago
Absolute zero is -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit, so -229.835 degrees F? In Celsius it's -136.575 degrees, as absolute zero is -273.15 degrees in Celsius.
deleted · 3 years ago
It will go from cold, to frickin' cold
xlaxxine · 3 years ago
0C = 273.15 Kelvin. If its going to go cold tomorrow, so temperature will decrease (by a factor of 2), thus 136.575Kelvin, which in celcius is -136.575C
xlaxxine · 3 years ago
-132.575x(9/5) + 32 Farenheit
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*coughs in genius*
.
And don't tell me this was some trick question
timebender25 · 3 years ago
The answer is "Colder"
bensen · 3 years ago
Don’t worry it’s just a philosoraptor sort of thing
It’s cool you worked it out though... literally
xlaxxine · 3 years ago
Ah, i almost used 1% of my power
scatmandingo · 3 years ago
“Twice as cold” is a nonsensical statement.
xlaxxine · 3 years ago
Umm how??
bensen · 3 years ago
Because zero times anything is still zero #isntmathfun
savage_demmigod · 3 years ago
Which is why you'd want to convert it to one of the other temperature types because then you'll have numbers to work with
scatmandingo · 3 years ago
Twice as cold doesn’t make sense because cold isn’t a tangible concept. It is the lack of heat. Temperature scales measure the differences in heat but can’t quantify cold. It’s like saying something is twice as dark.
funkmasterrex · 3 years ago
"cold", if you break down the relative definition is how much pieces of particles move through time and is a relative term for energy transference in space-time. @scatmandingo is correct, if you really want to break it down, the zero is no energy transference which makes the entire expression divided by zero, mathematically, which makes zero sense. A particle moving through space-time, no matter the point, will never have 0 energy. That's like saying the universe doesn't exist. Things can get really cold and slow, but they can't stop all together... and if they could nothing about space-time makes any sense as the only place that would be possible is a place outside space-time. It's also the why of the decimal points of our estimate of absolute zero. There are actually more, but what the hell is the point with an unachievable idea? After 3 decimal points the only people that care are working on super-conductors are either really bored or chasing a pointless and expensive "breakthrough"
funkmasterrex · 3 years ago
as we are learning how to build super-conductors that don't need to be so cold.
funkmasterrex · 3 years ago
I love how the first two sentences are me nonsensically repeating myself. I'm drunk and lost my train of thought, my bad.
funkmasterrex · 3 years ago
......okay?
XD
xlaxxine · 3 years ago
Ah, i see