• @[email protected]
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    62 years ago

    Sounds funny but really, why would a weight or length measurement start with ≠0?? Like “size of the dick or prince Charles”?

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      But that argument would go for temperature as well. Yet, here we are with the most commonly used ones having zero as wey more than the “nothing”-level.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Zero comes from experience, at least in Celsius. Its semi-scientifical as water is a pretty big part of our world. For our life and all it is pretty much the turning point, isnt it? But of course it could also be 50 or so, as below is possible

    • MxM111
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      252 years ago

      Less known 301.4375C at which F and K are the same and equal to 574.5875

      • ares35
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        102 years ago

        that’s when it starts to get ‘cold’. before that, it’s just a ‘little chilly’.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          I know this is a joke but as a Minnesotan I think right around -15°F (-26°c) is where it starts to get ‘cold’. This is where the air really begins to sting your face and people have issues starting their vehicles.

          • ares35
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            12 years ago

            am a native and lived there most my life. only had problems with my piece-of-shit cars when it got colder than -20F or so. block heater (on a timer) and a newish-battery and they always started, though, even during that record cold snap (-60F).

  • YAMAPIKARIYA
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    102 years ago

    Because 0 is not a lack of temperature like the measurements. (With the exception of Kelvin)

  • Sabre363
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    242 years ago

    Kelvin and Celsius are literally the same just offset by 273.15°

    • Zorque
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      62 years ago

      Theyre also not pointing guns at each other in the picture.

    • MxM111
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      252 years ago

      F and C are laterally the same just offset by 32 and scaled by 5/9.

      • Sabre363
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        52 years ago

        Ehh, they were developed in different ways using completely different reference points

        • MxM111
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          142 years ago

          C and K use different reference points too, yet you called them laterally the same.

          • Sabre363
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            42 years ago

            They have a lot more in common than Celsius and Fahrenheit, which are only related because they are both measures of temperature.

            • MxM111
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              62 years ago

              That depends how you count “a lot more in common”. The reference points for zero is much closer for C and F. People commonly use in everyday life C and F, but not K. Should I continue?

      • Sabre363
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        132 years ago

        Kelvin was developed from Celsius. The only difference is that 0° is based on absolute 0 (because it’s logical and constant) rather than the rough freezing point of water (a vague and inconsistent reference point). Every degree change in one unit is exactly the same change in the other.

        • Sneezycat
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          122 years ago

          Except Kelvin aren’t degrees (e.g. it’s just 273’15K not 273’15°K). But a change of one Kelvin is indeed equivalent to a change of one degree Celsius.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      Same relationship between Rankine and Fahrenheit.

      And 0 Kelvin and 0° Rankine are three same temperature.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        In that case I assume it would be 0 Rankine without degrees, too? Because it’s an absolute unit like Kelvin.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          It’s still technically defined based on its relationship to Fahrenheit, just like Kelvin was with Celsius until the 60s.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      Rankine is based? The same way pound-mol and 1000th of an inch are based?

      AT THAT POINT, WHY NOT JUST USE METRIC o_0

      I bite my thumb at Rankine, sir.