0 degree Fahrenheit is colder then 1 degree Fahrenheit
1
At -40 they're the same. Neither is colder, they are scales of measurements for temperature. Those are two scales of temperature. Neither can be defined as being colder. One could say that Fahrenheit is the "colder" scale because -1 degree Fahrenheit is colder than -1 degree Celsius. The "coldest" scale I know of is Kelvin, which defines 0 degrees Kelvin as -273.15 degrees Celsius (Absolute Zero).
1.150 would cause the least movement, because molecules move slower at colder temperatures.
-2, -1, 0, 1
One degree Fahrenheit is equal to -17.22222222222222...repeating degrees Celsius.
yes -1 is the number directly below 0. Its called sub-Zero
One degree is warmer than zero degrees. But its colder than two degrees. You haven't actually said what is being compared, you just asked why it is warmer.
-2F is colder than 1F
0 degrees kelvin is the temperature at which molecules cease to exist and stop moving; coldest temperature there is
Converting Celsius to Fahrenheit: 1.Multiply the temperature in Celsius by 1.8 2.Add 32 degrees. For example. 0 degrees Celsius is 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 0 x 1.8=0. 0+32=32 degrees
1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.22 degrees Celsius
32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius, is the melting point of water at 1 atm.