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21 answers

ahh lets see 0

2006-07-03 08:06:12 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Let's see, absolute zero is what, -273.15 degrees below zero Celsius? So w/ rounding, maybe the following: 0 Kelvin today--
if that were possible, 0 Kelvin tomorrow, 0 degrees Celsius today-- -137 degrees Celsius tomorrow, 0 degrees Fahrenheit today--
-198 degrees Fahrenheit tomorrow. We're not on planet earth are we? That's the best I can do; maybe someone will come up w/ a better answer. Best of luck in your quest for knowledge.

To Karman V: Good job explaining that cold is the absence of heat, but don't get so annoyed over people posting old jokes... Chill!

2006-07-03 15:33:48 · answer #2 · answered by tom d 2 · 0 0

You did not specify the scale on which you are measuring your zero degrees. You cannot measure cold, as temperature is a measure of heat. Thus by twice as cold I assume you mean half as warm. So I will answer you vague question with some assumptions as to what you really mean. When there is no heat the measurement is at absolute zero on the Kelvin Scale, -273.5 Celcius and -459.67 Farenheit.

At 0 degrees Kelvin, half as warm is 0 degrees Kelvin.

At 0 degrees Celcius, half as warm is minus 136.75 degrees Celcius.

At 0 degrees Farenheit, half as warm is minus 229.84 or so degrees Farenheit.

2006-07-03 16:42:35 · answer #3 · answered by a603 2 · 0 0

Since 32 degrees Fahrenheit is freezing and 0 degrees is actually 32 below freezing, then twice as cold would be 32 below zero (-32) or 64 degrees below freezing.

2006-07-03 22:46:19 · answer #4 · answered by woodenwater1959 3 · 0 0

0 degrees

2006-07-03 15:06:53 · answer #5 · answered by Nikki 4 · 0 0

it would be 0?

2006-07-03 15:06:29 · answer #6 · answered by 사과 3 · 0 0

What inspires people to keep asking this? There is no such thing as cold scientifically. There is heat, and heat content. Since you did not specify a scale, at zero Kelvin, it doesn't get any 'colder'. At zero Fahrenheit, half the heat of zero is -230 deg. At zero Celsius, -137 deg.

2006-07-03 15:13:49 · answer #7 · answered by Karman V 3 · 0 0

well you would take the average temperature for this day, which was 87, and you would go twice as far away from 87 as you did for 0, and you get -87. oh and by the way, you're not original, this has been asked like 20 times this month.

2006-07-03 15:10:26 · answer #8 · answered by timhasafender 3 · 0 0

if you mean 0 Fahrenheit, then that's -18 Celsius, which makes tomorrow -36 Celsius, or -32.8 Fahrenheit

0 Fahrenheit is also 256 Kelvin, so if you take twice as cold to mean half as hot, thats 128 Kelvin, or -229 Fahrenheit (ouch!)

2006-07-03 15:12:05 · answer #9 · answered by alia_vahed 3 · 0 0

It depends on what unit of measure you are speaking in (Fahrenheit, Celcius or Kelvin). Regardless, I can tell you for certain that you will definitely freeze to death if it is twice as cold tomorrow.

2006-07-03 15:12:35 · answer #10 · answered by A-da-Man 2 · 0 0

1 degree below zero

2006-07-03 15:06:18 · answer #11 · answered by iokietex@sbcglobal.net 1 · 0 0

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