• @CoggyMcFee
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    91 year ago

    It’s taught but not really for weather. So while I know the boiling and freezing points of various substances in Celsius, I don’t have instant recognition when I hear a Celsius temperature, I have to convert it in my head.

    • @Ultraviolet
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      11 year ago

      No need to convert. 0 to 40 is the part of the scale for weather, where 0 is dangerously cold and 40 is dangerously hot.

      • @CoggyMcFee
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        1 year ago

        No need to convert? What do you mean? Are you saying if I just intrinsically knew Celsius for weather I wouldn’t have to convert Celsius? Because that’s obviously true, but I’m just explaining I don’t intrinsically know Celsius in that way.

        Also, even if I did get to know Celsius really well, I would still have to convert it every time someone uses Fahrenheit, which is pretty much all the time in the US.

        Lastly, what do you mean, saying 0 C is “dangerously cold” and suggesting that below that temp is outside of the bounds of what is used for weather? Where I live the temperature stays below 0 C for long periods of time, never going above it.

        • @Ultraviolet
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          1 year ago

          If you know those two numbers, 0 and 40, you can get a general idea of what the temperature is in Celsius without doing any math. If you hear 20, you know that’s a moderate temperature because it’s right in between. If you hear 30, you know that’s fairly warm. If you hear 10, you know that’s chilly but not freezing. Below 0 or above 40 are extreme cold and extreme heat, respectively.

      • @Sludgeyy
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        11 year ago

        What’s 28° C? How can I envision in my mind what that means?

        0-40 as a scale. 28 is about 3/4 between the two. So it’s towards the hotter side but how far into it?

        It’s 82.4° F

        Low 80s. I know exactly how low 80’s feel.

        0-100 is easy to compare with %

        82.4° F is 82% hot.

        Humans like it around 75% hot between 50-100.

        So 82° is hot but not pushing 90s

        You can get a general idea of temperature very easy.

        • @Sludgeyy
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          31 year ago

          35°C with 100% humidity can be fatal to humans

          46°C with 50% humidity can be fatal to humans

          Humans can not survive for extended lengths at these temperatures and humidities.

          Saying “40 ain’t dangerously hot” is dumb.

          • @Sludgeyy
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            1 year ago

            56.7° C is the hottest temperature ever recorded. It was in the US.