| David M. Warren, Adolph Steinwehr - 1869 - 128 стор.
...graduated scale is marked off in degrees indicating the different temperatures to which the mereury is exposed. There are three kinds of thermometers...many scientific works, fixes them at 0° and 100°. N One degree of Centigrade is equal to 1.8° Fahrenheit; and one degree of Reaumur is equal to 2J°... | |
| David M. Warren - 1873 - 122 стор.
...between these points, the graduated scale is marked off in degrees indicating the different temperatures to which the mercury is exposed. There are three kinds...0° and 100°. One degree of Centigrade is equal to 1.8° Fahrenheit; and one degree of Reaumur is equal to 2^° Fahrenheit. Thus, if we wish to change... | |
| James Grant - 1912 - 250 стор.
...fixed his graduations as zero, the lowest temperature obtained by mixing together snow or ice and salt, the freezing point of water at 32°, and the boiling point at 212°. Thus between freezing and the boiling points of water there are 180°. On the Centigrade instrument... | |
| Paul Carus - 1916 - 860 стор.
...happened to fall at 212°. At the present day it is customary to graduate the Fahrenheit scale by fixing the freezing point of water at 32° and the boiling point at 212°, the interval between these two divisions being divided into 180 degrees. By extending these divisions... | |
| David Talbot Day - 1922 - 1024 стор.
...gashes; as, gas and oils exude from the underlying formation. Fahrenheit. — A thermometer scale with the freezing point of water at 32° and the boiling point at 212°. Degrees Fahrenheit = (Degrees CentigradeXj)+32 = (Degrees R6aumurXf)+32. Fat. — (1) A white or yellowish... | |
| David Talbot Day - 1922 - 1024 стор.
...gashes; as, gas and oils exude from the underlying formation. Fahrenheit. — A thermometer scale with the freezing point of water at 32° and the boiling point at 212°. Degrees Fahrenheit = (Degrees CentigradeXfO+32 = (Degrees ReaumurXf)+32. Fat. — (1) A white or yellowish... | |
| D.M. WARREN - 1856 - 94 стор.
...are three kinds of thermometers in common use in various parts of the world: Fahrenheit's, Keaumur's, and the Centigrade. Fahrenheit's, that most generally...Fahrenheit ; and one degree of Reaumur is equal to 2J° Fahrenheit. Thus, if you wish to change the temperature from Centigrade to Fahrenheit, multiply... | |
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