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14 answers

Ha,Ha, very funny. I cannot believe the number of people who are actually trying to give you a serious answer.

Zero times two is still zero.

So it will be zero degrees again tomorrow.

2007-05-01 08:44:31 · answer #1 · answered by Randy G 7 · 0 2

If your degrees are Kelvin, it'll be zero degrees because zero degree K is absolute zero, nothing can go lower.

If your degrees are Celsius (aka Centigrade), it'll be 1/2 274 deg K = 137 which is - 137 deg C. I assumed "twice as cold" means half as hot.

If your degrees are in Fahrenheit, twice as cold (half as hot) will be -215 deg F.

You can go to the source cited below and play with the temperatures yourself.

2007-05-01 09:06:19 · answer #2 · answered by oldprof 7 · 0 1

If it's 0 Kelvin or Rankine today it will be 0 tomorrow.

If it's 0 Celsius or Fahrenheit today it will be 273.15 Celsius or 459.67 Fahrenheit tomorrow (twice as cold is the same as twice as hot - heat and cold are 'measurements' of the same thing).

Go through my previous answers if you want a full explanation.

2007-05-01 10:55:33 · answer #3 · answered by Trevor 7 · 0 0

Since 0 x 0 = 0 we will use the Fahrenheit scale.
Assuming you mean 0 degrees Celsius, which is +32 degrees Fahrenheit, the answer should be 32 x -2 = (-64) =
- 32 degrees Fahrenheit!

2007-05-01 08:33:20 · answer #4 · answered by Old Truth Traveler 3 · 0 2

0 degrees is 32 degrees below below freezing. So that would make my guess -62 degrees by doing 32*2.

i believe that is the answer, but i only have a 7th grade education, so im not sure.

2007-05-01 08:30:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

This isn't specific enough. Zero of ANYTHING times 2 is zero. It will be no warmer and no colder.

2007-05-01 10:32:04 · answer #6 · answered by Morgan U 1 · 1 0

negative zero degrees

2007-05-01 08:30:11 · answer #7 · answered by NoobStatus 1 · 1 1

-10 degrees ?

2007-05-01 08:38:06 · answer #8 · answered by tiger katy 2 · 0 1

zero degrees (if taken on the same scale)

2007-05-01 08:32:28 · answer #9 · answered by Olkina 2 · 1 1

There isn't an 'amount' of cold, as cold is the absence of heat. So it can't be doubled.

2007-05-01 09:45:16 · answer #10 · answered by Jim 5 · 0 1

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