Boiling Water Temp: Celsius vs. Fahrenheit

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the temperature drop of boiling water as measured by Celsius and Fahrenheit thermometers. When the water cools to 140°F, the calculated drop from boiling (212°F) is 72°F, which converts to approximately 22.223°C. This result does not match any of the provided answer choices (30, 40, 50, 80). The conversation highlights the complexity of converting temperature changes between the two scales, emphasizing that the standard conversion formulas do not directly apply to temperature differences. Understanding the relationship between the scales is crucial for accurate calculations.
Foehammer
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Homework Statement


A Celsius and a Fahrenheit thermometer are dipped in boiling water. The temperature of the water is brought down until the Fahrenheit thermometer reads 140°. So, the fall in temperature registered by Celsius scale is:
30
40
50
80

Homework Equations


F=(C*(9/5))+32
C=(F-32)*(5/9)

The Attempt at a Solution


Boiling water is 212 F. 212-140=72.
Convert 72 F to C and I get 22.223 C.
My answer doesn't match any of the choices.
 
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If F=1.8C+32

Then F1=1.8C1+32
and F2=1.8C2+32

So you change in F, F2-F1= ? (write in terms of the formula and you'll see that the change in F can't be converted to C using the standard formula).

Alternatively, convert everything to C first.
 
rock.freak667 said:
If F=1.8C+32

Then F1=1.8C1+32
and F2=1.8C2+32

So you change in F, F2-F1= ? (write in terms of the formula and you'll see that the change in F can't be converted to C using the standard formula).

Alternatively, convert everything to C first.

Got it. Thanks a lot!
 
Foehammer said:

Homework Statement


A Celsius and a Fahrenheit thermometer are dipped in boiling water. The temperature of the water is brought down until the Fahrenheit thermometer reads 140°. So, the fall in temperature registered by Celsius scale is:
30
40
50
80

Homework Equations


F=(C*(9/5))+32
C=(F-32)*(5/9)

The Attempt at a Solution


Boiling water is 212 F. 212-140=72.
Convert 72 F to C and I get 22.223 C.
My answer doesn't match any of the choices.

The reason '32' appears in these temperature conversion formulas is that in the Celsius scale, water freezes at 0 C, while this occurs at 32 F on the Fahrenheit scale. Between freezing and boiling, there are 180 Fahrenheit degrees and 100 Celsius degrees, so each Celsius degree is 180/100, or 9/5 Fahrenheit degrees.
 
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