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14 answers

I assumed you were talking in celcius, so i was going to say the temp would be the same coz twice zero is still zero. But then I seen other people talking bout Fahrenheit. So assuming you mean zero celcius then this would be 32 fahrenheit. So tomorrow would be -8.8889 celcius coz 32 halfed is 16 and 16 fahrenheit is minus 8.8889 celcuis.
But if you mean zero fahrenheit then I would do the same blah blah blah.
I haven't got a clue what all the other people are talking bout with Kelvin or Rankine really.

It all depends whether you mean zero celcius, fahrenheit or wot. Im too bored to even think bout it now lol

p.s. did you know this question has been asked 7 times already?? you wasted five points asking it really mate lol

2007-05-03 03:52:24 · answer #1 · answered by curly_clare86 2 · 1 1

If you establish a temperature value that could be said to be midway between hot and cold - sort of neutral, then take how many degrees there are between that and zero, then double it, that would be the tempertaure if it was twice as cold.

2007-05-03 01:19:30 · answer #2 · answered by john g 5 · 1 1

Depends on the definition of 'twice as cold'.

I'm assuming that you mean 0°C for this. You cannot work in Deg C as this is a relative scale, so must start in the absolute scale of Kelvin;
0°C = 273.15 K

Let's assume that 'twice as cold' means half of the temperature.
This gives 136.6 K, or -136.6°C.

So, tomorrow it will be -136.6°C....
.......brrrrrrrr!

.

2007-05-03 01:35:55 · answer #3 · answered by SB 3 · 1 1

The answer (which I can't be bothered to explain) is 0 degrees tomorrow if you're talking Kelvin or Rankine, +273.15 if you're talking Celsius, +459.67 if you're talking Fahrenheit.

2007-05-03 00:02:50 · answer #4 · answered by Trevor 7 · 0 2

What if you are using degrees Kelvin?
You can't get colder that zero Kelvin.

2007-05-02 23:52:45 · answer #5 · answered by efes_haze 5 · 1 1

2x0=0. Easy!

2007-05-02 21:41:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

-1 This means negative one and is a freezing point because any degree after 0 is a freezing point.

2007-05-02 21:40:59 · answer #7 · answered by Sne 2 · 0 3

It'll be -9

0c is 32 Farenheit. Half that is 16F which is -9c

2007-05-02 21:40:25 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

-2 centigrade

2007-05-02 21:43:53 · answer #9 · answered by lucreciacresent 2 · 0 3

ICE COLD!!!

2007-05-03 02:47:37 · answer #10 · answered by Lisa L 3 · 0 0

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