Difference between revisions of "Celsius"
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* The standard abbreviation is ''C''. | * The standard abbreviation is ''C''. | ||
| − | 0ºC is the point at which [[water]] freezes (transforms from a liquid into a solid: ice) within an [[Atmosphere|atmospheric pressure]] of 1 [[ | + | 0ºC is the point at which [[water]] freezes (transforms from a liquid into a solid: ice) within an [[Atmosphere|atmospheric pressure]] of 1 [[Atmospheric Pressure|atm]]. |
| − | 100ºC is the point at which [[water]] boils (transforms from a liquid into a gas: steam or water vapor) within an [[Atmosphere|atmospheric pressure]] of 1 [[ | + | 100ºC is the point at which [[water]] boils (transforms from a liquid into a gas: steam or water vapor) within an [[Atmosphere|atmospheric pressure]] of 1 [[Atmospheric Pressure|atm]]. |
The lowest temperature that is theoretically possible is -273.15ºC (absolute zero). At this temperature, the motion of particles which constitute heat is minimal. | The lowest temperature that is theoretically possible is -273.15ºC (absolute zero). At this temperature, the motion of particles which constitute heat is minimal. | ||
Revision as of 11:36, 1 March 2019
Celsius is the scale of measure for temperature.
- It is also called the Centigrade scale (centigrade means divided into 100).
- It is a standard Imperial metric.
Description (Specifications)
The Celsius scale is a system for measuring temperature. It is divided into degrees (symbol º) and is based around the freezing and boiling points of water (H2O).
- The standard abbreviation is C.
0ºC is the point at which water freezes (transforms from a liquid into a solid: ice) within an atmospheric pressure of 1 atm.
100ºC is the point at which water boils (transforms from a liquid into a gas: steam or water vapor) within an atmospheric pressure of 1 atm.
The lowest temperature that is theoretically possible is -273.15ºC (absolute zero). At this temperature, the motion of particles which constitute heat is minimal.
Image Repository
Term Usage Example
The mean surface temperature of Terra, the human homeworld, is approximately 15ºC
History & Background (Dossier)
The Celsius scale was defined as a means of defining temperature on Terra prior to the foundation of the Terran Confederation: it is named for Anders Celsius, a Terran astronomer born around -2803. Technologists found the Celsius scale useful as the concept of the Technology Level and standardized ideas about sophont society development began to take form.[1]
References & Contributors (Sources)
- Marc Miller. T5 Core Rules (Far Future Enterprises, 2013), 615.
- Traveller Wiki Editorial Team
- Author & Contributor: Lord (Marquis) and Master of Sophontology Maksim-Smelchak of the Ministry of Science
- ↑ Information provided to the library by Maksim-Smelchak

