There are really only two units that are widely used to describe temperature:
-- the Kelvin/degree Celsius, equal to 1/100 of the difference between water
freezing and water boiling;
-- the degree Fahrenheit/degree Rankine, equal to 1/180 of the difference between
water freezing and water boiling;
The Reaumer degree, equal to 1/80 of the difference between water freezing and
water boiling, was used in Europe until the late 18th Century. Its only modern use
is in the measuring of milk temperature in cheese production. It's used in some
Italian dairies making Parmigiano-Reggiano and Grana Padano cheeses and in
Swiss Alp cheeses.
Teperature is measure in degrees - on various scales - internationally.
To measure temperature, scientists use:KelvinCelsiusFahrenheit.
To measure temperature, scientists use:KelvinCelsiusFahrenheit.
There is no specific suffix. There are various units, though.
they are Celsius Fahrenheit Kelvin
Teperature is measure in degrees - on various scales - internationally.
No. As Temperature isn't by any way a measure of how much energy is ''stored'' in a substance, it vary with the heat capacity of the said substance...«Heat capacity (usually denoted by a capital C, often with subscripts), or thermal capacity, is the measurable physical quantity that characterizes the amount of heat required to change a substance's temperature by a given amount. In the International System of Units (SI), heat capacity is expressed in units of joule(s) (J) per kelvin (K).»
To measure temperature, scientists use:KelvinCelsiusFahrenheit.
The usual units of measure of temperature are commonly called degrees (not to be confused with the units of degrees used to measure angles), however there are various scales with different sized degrees (e.g. Celsius/Centigrade-Kelvin degree, Fahrenheit-Rankine degree, Rømer degree, Wedgwood degree).There are other less common or special purpose units of measure of temperature (e.g. accumulated thermal unit, Gas Mark, homologous temperature, Planck temperature, thermodynamic beta, thermodynamic temperature).
To measure temperature, scientists use:KelvinCelsiusFahrenheit.
The units of measure in temperature. (Fahrenheit ; Celsius)
The units that scientists use to measure temperature are: Celsius Fahrenheit Kelvin
In itself it is none of them - it is just a number.However if some units are attached, it can be any of them:If its units are a linear measure, eg 472 m, it is a lengthIf its units are a square measure, eg 472 sq cm, it is an areaIf its units are a weight measure, eg 472 kg, it is massIf its units are a time measure, eg 472 seconds, it is timeIf its units are a temperature measure, eg 472 K, it is temperature.
miles Miles
Units of measure
Units of measure
The units of temperature are degrees. You can measure degrees in either Fahrenheit, Celsius, or Kelvin.