- chaogomu ( @chaogomu@kbin.social ) 62•1 year ago
Fun fact time, -40F is -40C.
And 575F is 575K
- BeigeAgenda ( @BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca ) English43•1 year ago
Fahrenheit is a strange scale.
- jivemasta ( @jivemasta@reddthat.com ) English22•1 year ago
Fahrenheit makes sense for humans. Most of your day to day climates are in the 0 to 100 scale, and every 10 degrees is a noticeable level change.
- 100 super hot day, approaching unsafe without counter measures
- 90 really hot day, slightly annoying and should take precautions
- 80, hot day, more annoying than anything
- 70, beautiful day, enjoy it
- 60 not to bad, if it’s windy you could be slightly on the cold side
- 50 long sleeves or maybe a hoodie
- 40 definitely a jacket, and hat
- 30 full on coat, scarfe, and hat
- 20 multiple layers of out for a while, maybe double pants
- 10 annoyingly cold, need to start thinking about the safety precautions
- 0 and below, temperature now measured in hold long you can be outside before danger
Celsius makes sense for science stuff because it’s derived from science stuff, so things like calories and energy work with it. But it doesn’t really apply to everyday life as well. So it actually makes sense to use both units for the things the are good at.
- aksdb ( @aksdb@feddit.de ) English40•1 year ago
It depends on what you were raised with. For me I have all these relevant points in my head for C. 25 is nice, under 20 you slowly need to dress longer stuff. Over 30 is hot, over 40 sucks hard, over 50 can become deadly soon. Body temp is around 37.
- Truck_kun ( @Truck_kun@beehaw.org ) English9•1 year ago
I don’t science anymore, but living in a F country, I keep in mind for conversions:
0C is freezing point of water ~32F 20-22C is room temp ~68-72F 30C+ is Unhappy temperatures/hot.
Really only things I need to remember, and gradient based off of. It can get up to 45C where I live, but that would never be important to me. I hate the heat, if it’s 30C+, the degree to which it is hot matters little, I’m going to just want to stay out of the sun or go inside.
- Obi ( @Obi@sopuli.xyz ) English6•1 year ago
A F country? You can just say the US, I doubt it’d be Cayman Islands or Liberia lol.
- joeyb4589 ( @joeyb4589@sopuli.xyz ) English1•1 year ago
Here 70F is perfect weather. For reference we set our a/c at 68 at night and it’s literally freezing cold if you walk though in your underwear. Any hotter and you’ll need to start dressing in lighter stuff. Any colder and you might wanna wear a flannel. Hell my house stays at 72 all day and it’s perfect.
- BeigeAgenda ( @BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca ) English30•1 year ago
Being from outside of the US I’m used to Celsius for everything, so I can make the same list, the numbers are just not whole 10s and I would probably round to nearest 5.
- richieadler ( @richieadler@lemmy.myserv.one ) English6•1 year ago
They probably don’t understand numbers not ending in 0.
- richieadler ( @richieadler@lemmy.myserv.one ) English5•1 year ago
But it doesn’t really apply to everyday life as well. So it actually makes sense to use both units for the things the are good at.
It’s funny to assume that all people using Celsius are unable to ascertain how they will feel outside based on the temperature value.
I mean, I understand that round numbers are cute, but we are able to handle numbers ending in 5 as well as numbers ending in 0.
- ursakhiin ( @ursakhiin@beehaw.org ) English2•1 year ago
Somebody’s from the north. Even as warm blooded as I am 80 is a nice day and 90 is just annoyingly hot.
- namingthingsiseasy ( @namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev ) English3•1 year ago
And at what temperatures are C and K equal?
- chaogomu ( @chaogomu@kbin.social ) 15•1 year ago
Never. They use the same spacing between degrees. The Kelvin scale was derived from the Celsius scale, just placing the 0° at absolute zero rather than at the freezing point of water.
- perviouslyiner ( @perviouslyiner@lemm.ee ) English53•1 year ago
Based on human perception, based on water chemistry, based on physics.
- tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺 ( @tryptaminev@feddit.de ) English15•1 year ago
You’ll be shocked to learn that the distance in Kelvin is also adjusted to water “chemistry”, albeit changing the aggregate state seems more physics to me, since no molceules are reacting with each other.
- perviouslyiner ( @perviouslyiner@lemm.ee ) English7•1 year ago
Thankfully that has been redefined using the Boltzmann constant, so now anyone in the universe can agree on °C and K without needing to measure any Vienna standard ocean water.
- _MusicJunkie ( @_MusicJunkie@beehaw.org ) English6•1 year ago
I was going to make a joke about how Austria is landlocked, how did we come up with the idea of making an ocean water standard.
Apparently the IAEA which is headquartered here set that standard, for anyone else curious.
- Spzi ( @Spzi@lemm.ee ) English1•1 year ago
You can’t change the aggregate state of a single molecule, or how do you mean that? Excluding plasma.
- tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺 ( @tryptaminev@feddit.de ) English6•1 year ago
you can of a lot of molecules though. and tgat is classically “physics” rather than “chemistry”. Classical chemistry is reactiona between atoms or molecules to form new ones.
If you get deeper into it, the lines between chemistry and physics blur anyways.
- Spzi ( @Spzi@lemm.ee ) English3•1 year ago
Ah yes, now I understand your previous comment. My reading error, thanks.
- rainynight65 ( @rainynight65@feddit.de ) English7•1 year ago
Zero Fahrenheit is the freezing point of brine (of a certain concentration). That’s water chemistry.
Originally, 90F was based on the average human body temperature, but that later changed to 96F, which just goes to show how arbitrary that scale is.
- LastYearsPumpkin ( @LastYearsPumpkin@feddit.ch ) English4•1 year ago
It’s all arbitrary. Someone just decided to base a scale off of something and that something isn’t fixed from the start. The meter used to be based off the measurement of the earth, but now it’s based off of light.
It’s just some random semi-useful starting point that we all agree on so we’re using the same language.
- rainynight65 ( @rainynight65@feddit.de ) English7•1 year ago
The meter did not change, science has merely defined it more precisely and reliably over time. It is a measure of length, still one 40 millionth of the circumference of the earth through the poles. Other definitions like the speed of light definition will give you the same result. These newer definitions have reduced uncertainty and added ways to reproduce its length by natural means. But it’s not like the ‘original’ meter was shorter or longer than today’s meter, at least not by any noticeable margin.
Shifting the top end of a temperature scale by over five percent of the scale is a bit more arbitrary than that.
- MonkderZweite ( @MonkderZweite@feddit.ch ) English2•1 year ago
So, Kelvin in Physics, Celsius in daily usage and Fahrenheit…?
- hemko ( @hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) English6•1 year ago
0°C getting cold outside
100°C getting hot in sauna - Mouette ( @Mouette@jlai.lu ) English4•1 year ago
100° outside is dead
- Kusimulkku ( @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee ) English1•1 year ago
True, you can be in 100’C indoors and be fine (sauna). Though I’ve heard some people think you’ll boil alive there lol