So what is twice as cold as 0°C?
I've seen a lot of people convert 0 centigrade to fahrenheit/kelvin. Half/double it and convert it back.
I can't help but feel this will yield false results.
Surely "twice as cold" would mean the molecules move/vibrate twice as slow?
But it would differ depending on which elements the "twice as cold" is applied to. Right?
Example (not legit): you could have both Steel and Water at 0°C.
But at -100°C the Steel molecules could be vibrating/moving twice as slow, while the water molecules could be 4 times as slow.
I probably don't even know what I'm talking about lol
I've seen a lot of people convert 0 centigrade to fahrenheit/kelvin. Half/double it and convert it back.
I can't help but feel this will yield false results.
Surely "twice as cold" would mean the molecules move/vibrate twice as slow?
But it would differ depending on which elements the "twice as cold" is applied to. Right?
Example (not legit): you could have both Steel and Water at 0°C.
But at -100°C the Steel molecules could be vibrating/moving twice as slow, while the water molecules could be 4 times as slow.
I probably don't even know what I'm talking about lol
