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Well you need to take into consideration the temperature of the day before and the degree to which the temperature has dropped during the day. if it dropped from 2 degrees to be 0, then twice as cold would be another 2 degree drop. etc.

2007-02-04 11:49:15 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you want a real physics answer, you need to convert the temperature into Kelvin first. 0 degrees Celsius = 273 Kelvin, so twice as cold would be 136.5 Kelvin, or -136.5 degrees Celsius.

0 degrees Fahrenheit is 255 Kelvin. Twice as cold would be 127.5 Kelvin, or -230 degrees Fahrenheit.

Kelvin is a temperature scale based on Celsius, but shifted so that there are no negative temperatures - absolute zero (0 Kelvin) is as cold as is physically possible.

2007-02-04 21:40:18 · answer #2 · answered by kris 6 · 0 0

0 x 2 = 0

0 degrees

2007-02-04 19:10:55 · answer #3 · answered by ♥ £.O.V.€. ♥ 3 · 0 0

well, technically, in Fahrenheit, the temperature would be 16 degrees. if you wanted to change that to Celsius, the answer would be -8.89 degrees.

2007-02-04 20:52:00 · answer #4 · answered by chrisser665 3 · 0 0

As cold as it was in my house this morning
at 2am when the furnace quit.

2007-02-04 19:15:17 · answer #5 · answered by cheyenneman 2 · 0 0

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