Mathematically, zero.
2006-12-28 22:08:25
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answer #1
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answered by chemistry_freako 3
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Actually, answer is "Uncertain".
0 degrees celsius is considered "cold". If you say twice "hotter" what is the baseline of hotness and coldness? That is "hot" in physics is any value higher than 0 degrees.....It can be 1 degree, 2 degrees......N degrees....The question is incomplete for us to give a definite and final temperature measurement.....in terms of exact measurable quantity...
Answer can not be 0 degrees as twice hotter is undefined.
Not sure if it makes sense?
Cheers!!
2006-12-29 06:15:56
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answer #2
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answered by kabo k 1
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Hi,
Let today's degree be x
Tomorrow's degree will be 2x
Given, x=0..
So the degree will remains constant,
i.e
Tomorrow's degree is 0
2006-12-29 13:58:37
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answer #3
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answered by sugan 1
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0 degrees
2006-12-29 06:07:44
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answer #4
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answered by Mohd. Suhail 2
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You must realise that there are different temperature scales. The only scale which will permit you to talk about "twice as hot", etc., is the Absolute or Kelvin scale. 0 deg C = 273 deg K, so twice as hot means 546 deg K = 273 deg C - bloody hot.
2006-12-29 06:11:40
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answer #5
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answered by JJ 7
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18 degrees.
0 degrees Celsius is 32 Fahrenheit. Therefore, twice 32 is 64. So 64 degrees Fahrenheit is 18 degrees Celsius.
2006-12-29 06:10:03
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answer #6
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answered by cricket_paget 1
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This question makes no sense. 0 is NOT the right answer. Temperature in Celsius or Fahrenheit is a relative scale.
Convert to Kelvin and then it makes sense.
2006-12-29 06:15:14
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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0 degrees c = 32 degrees f
Twice as hot =64 degrees f
= 17.7 degrees c
2006-12-29 06:14:07
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answer #8
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answered by Billy T 5
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it can't get 2x hotter that's just immpossible because if it's the same then it's obviously not hotter
2006-12-29 10:09:14
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answer #9
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answered by Bubblegum_Faeire 3
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0, putz.
2006-12-29 06:07:07
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answer #10
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answered by Feeling new @ 42 4
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