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Q: Temp Centigrade to Fahrenheit - easy for someone who knows how to do this! ( Answered 5 out of 5 stars,   3 Comments )
Question  
Subject: Temp Centigrade to Fahrenheit - easy for someone who knows how to do this!
Category: Science > Math
Asked by: writer2reader-ga
List Price: $10.00
Posted: 20 Dec 2004 13:04 PST
Expires: 19 Jan 2005 13:04 PST
Question ID: 445225
I need the scientific answers to these conversions ASAP. 

1. Normal Body Temp = 98.6F. 2 to 4 degrees C below 98.6 = ??? F
2. An increase of 2.6 degrees C = an increase of ??? F
3. An increase of 2.8 degrees C = an increase of ??? F
4. Internal operating temperature of 70C = ??? F
5. Increase of 1 degree C = ??? F
6. Increase of 2.9 degree C = ???

I've tried the converters, but they don't work! They tell me that 1
degree Celsius = 33.8 degree Fahrenheit; but the study I'm trying to
translate says that 1 degree C = about 2 degrees F.

I'm stumped and feeling stupid!

Thanks, and need ASAP. 

Susan
Answer  
Subject: Re: Temp Centigrade to Fahrenheit - easy for someone who knows how to do this!
Answered By: juggler-ga on 20 Dec 2004 13:41 PST
Rated:5 out of 5 stars
 
Hello.

The conversion formulae are:

°C = 5/9 (°F - 32)
°F = 9/5 °C + 32

see:
Convert Me: Celsius and Fahrenheit
http://anduin.eldar.org/~ben/convert/c_f.html


1. So 98.6 °F ....

°C = 5/9 (98.6 - 32)
°C = 5/9 (66.6)
°C = 37 

So "2 to 4 degrees C below 98.6" would mean 33 to 35 °C 

33 °C = 91.4 °F
35 °C = 95 °F


---------

"for every 1.8 degrees that temperature changes on the Fahrenheit
scale, temperature will change 1 degree on the Celsius scale. Thus the
ratio of Fº  to Cº  is 1.8 : 1 "
http://www.internet4classrooms.com/F2C.htm



2. Thus, an increase of 2.6 degrees Celsius would be the equivalent of
an increase of 4.68 degrees Fahrenheit.

(i.e., 2.6 * 1.8 = 4.68  )

----------

3. An increase of 2.8 degrees Celsius would be the equivalent of an
increase of 5.04 degrees Fahrenheit.

(i.e., 2.8 * 1.8 = 5.04  )

----------

4.  70 °C = 158 °F

As mentioned above:
°F = 9/5 °C + 32

so 

°F = 9/5 (70) + 32
°F = 126 + 32
°F = 158

-------

5. As mentioned above, an ncrease of 1 degree C = 1.8 degrees F

-------

6. An increase of 2.9 degree C  would be the equivalent of an 5.22
degrees Fahrenheit.

(i.e., 2.9 * 1.8 = 5.22  )


----------
search terms:
celsius fahrenheit 9/5 32 1.8

I hope this helps. If anything is unclear, please request clarification.

Clarification of Answer by juggler-ga on 20 Dec 2004 13:42 PST
Sorry for that typo:
"5. As mentioned above, an increase..."

Request for Answer Clarification by writer2reader-ga on 20 Dec 2004 14:02 PST
Thank you. 

For future reference, I am still unclear on how to use these
converters, including the one you gave me below.

I plugged in  2.6 C to ? F and got:

Results:
Celsius: 2.6
Fahrenheit: 36.68

NOT 4.68 ! ! !

OK, I'm a writer, not a numbers person ... but I just don't get it! I
know your answers are right, I'm just dumbfounded.

Thanks again,
Susan 

Answering is optional. Thank you again.

Clarification of Answer by juggler-ga on 20 Dec 2004 14:24 PST
Ah, I think I see your problem.  

You're mixing up converting a FIXED temperature with converting a
marginal temperature CHANGE.  Two different things...

Try thinking about it this way:

0 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 

See the two thermometers on this page: 
http://www.internet4classrooms.com/F2C.

Now, would it make any sense to say that a CHANGE of 0 degrees Celsius
was the equivalent of a CHANGE of 32 degrees Fahrenheit?  Of course
not!  A change of zero is no change at all.

Sure, when the temperature is exactly 2.6 degrees Celsius, the
equivalent is Fahrenheit temperature is 36.68.  But that's a different
issue from an INCREASE of 2.6 degrees Celsius.

Again, the key point is that for every 1.8 degrees the temperature
changes on the Fahrenheit scale, the temperature will change 1 degree
on the Celsius scale.

Try plugging in some numbers...

For example, convert 10 degrees Celsius to F, and then convert 11
degrees Celsius to F.  You'll notice that the marginal increase of 1
degree Celsius is the equivalent of a 1.8 degree increase in the
Fahrenheit temperature.


I hope this helps.

Clarification of Answer by juggler-ga on 20 Dec 2004 14:25 PST
The link for the two thermomters should have been:
http://www.internet4classrooms.com/F2C.htm
writer2reader-ga rated this answer:5 out of 5 stars and gave an additional tip of: $2.00
Finally, someone to help me understand this! Thank you so much. I will
be using your info for the fact-checking process of my story. Much
obliged.

Comments  
Subject: Re: Temp Centigrade to Fahrenheit - easy for someone who knows how to do this!
From: juggler-ga on 20 Dec 2004 14:53 PST
 
Thank you for the tip.
-juggler
Subject: Re: Temp Centigrade to Fahrenheit - easy for someone who knows how to do this!
From: guzzi-ga on 20 Dec 2004 19:02 PST
 
A little trick. Do all experiments at minus forty degrees -- it?s
exactly the same in C and F.

Best
Subject: Re: Temp Centigrade to Fahrenheit - easy for someone who knows how to do this!
From: lazytracker-ga on 16 Feb 2005 05:18 PST
 
double the celsius: eg 10
10x2=20
then subtract 10% of the answer =(20-2=18)
now add 32
this equals 50
So 10C equals 50F

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