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16 answers

Nonsensical question - nobody can answer this. And nobody ever says "twice as cold" simply because they know it is meaningless.

Thermo, your calculations (below) are WRONG.

2006-06-19 09:04:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Measure the time it take 1 liter of 20 degree C water to freeze at 0 degrees. Lower the temperature until it freezes twice as fast. That's twice as cold. Hahaha.

2006-06-19 09:07:56 · answer #2 · answered by shake_um 5 · 0 0

0 degrees

2006-06-19 09:04:20 · answer #3 · answered by lookn_4_laffs 5 · 0 0

0 degrees

2006-06-19 09:02:38 · answer #4 · answered by tom_a_hawk12 4 · 0 0

0 degrees Celsius = 273 K
273/2 K = 136.5 K = -136.5 degrees Celsius

0 F = -32 C
tomorrow: -64 C = -83 F

2006-06-19 10:19:22 · answer #5 · answered by Thermo 6 · 0 0

Depends on the scale you are using... 0 degrees celcius = 32 degrees fahrenheit... and twice as cold means reducing the temparature by half...

so it would be 16 degrees fahrenheit or -8.9 degrees celcius "tomorrow"!

2006-06-19 09:06:09 · answer #6 · answered by NY Resident 2 · 0 0

0 x 0 = 0 - was that F degrees or C degrees ? Either way it's pretty close to zero ...

2006-06-19 09:16:56 · answer #7 · answered by aBranch@60-WA ,<>< 4 · 0 0

It would all depend on what the temperature of "cold" is.

2006-06-19 09:04:26 · answer #8 · answered by sam21462 5 · 0 0

You actually don't do the simple maths: 0X2. You should use the thermal laws to find out.

2006-06-19 09:04:06 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"twice as cold" really doesn't mean much; in other words, "coolness" isn't a quantity that can be doubled.

2006-06-21 15:20:01 · answer #10 · answered by Kamran the Great © 5 · 0 0

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