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13 answers

-136.575 degree Celsius.

Absolute zero is at 0 degree Kelvin or -273.15 degree Celsius. Half of 273.15 K( zero C) is 136.575 K, or -136.575 C.

It is not -9 C, because the use of 32 F to calculate does not take the absolute zero, in which zero C is compared into account.

2006-08-04 11:07:14 · answer #1 · answered by muhaha 2 · 4 3

0 f

2006-08-04 18:00:50 · answer #2 · answered by cherokeeflyer 6 · 0 0

Unless You Know What Zero Is, You Can't Answer That Question, And Since Zero Has No Value, There Can Be No Double Zero... Kind Of Complicated, I Know.


=]

2006-08-04 18:03:04 · answer #3 · answered by JaG 2 · 0 0

This is a bit of a trick question. Neither Celsius nor Fahrenheit are what is called Ratio Data. Ratio data requires a meaningful 0 point and it is only meaningful to discussing doubling ratio data. . To solve this problem, you would need to convert to degrees kelvin. So

0 C = 273.15K
273.15/2 is -136.45 degree Celsius

2006-08-04 18:07:29 · answer #4 · answered by Student T 2 · 0 0

minus 100 Celsius

2006-08-04 18:01:34 · answer #5 · answered by Pey 7 · 0 0

It's not really a valid question. You could ask "What is half as warm?", I guess, relative to 0 Kelvin, which would make coldsoup correct (appropriate sn to be answering this question!). It's kinda like asking "OK, I have $100, so what is twice as less as that?" because a temperature is not a measure of how cold it is, but of how warm it is. I will now cease picking nits.

2006-08-04 18:16:45 · answer #6 · answered by BobBobBob 5 · 0 0

Super 0

2006-08-04 18:02:42 · answer #7 · answered by DaFinger 4 · 0 0

-100 degree celcius. The temperature decreases backward from +0 to -100.

2006-08-04 20:08:41 · answer #8 · answered by Ethan 4 · 0 0

approximately -9 celcius

Proof:
0 celsius = 32 fahrenheit
Twice as cold = half as warm
32 / 2=16
16f = approx -9c

2006-08-04 18:06:11 · answer #9 · answered by Mel 4 · 0 0

-32 degrees Fahrenheit

2006-08-04 18:04:28 · answer #10 · answered by Spock 6 · 0 0

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