Need to know if you should put a coat on before you go out? Want to check if you can put the cookies in the oven? Temperature scales provide a way of quantifying and measuring how hot or cold a material is. There are four major temperature scales that are used around the world – Fahrenheit and Celsius are frequently used in everyday, around the house measurements, while the absolute zero-based Kelvin and Rankine scales are more commonly used in industry and the sciences.
Fahrenheit Scale
Close-up of a dial displaying Fahrenheit and Celsius numbers MarianVejcik/iStock/GettyImages
The Fahrenheit scale of temperature is the common form of temperature measurement used in the United States and some parts of the Caribbean. It was created by the German scientist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in the early 18th century, and adapted its measurements standards from a previous scale created by Ole Roemer.
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit, and boils at 212 degrees F. The Fahrenheit temperature scale includes negative temperatures, below 0 degrees F. The coldest possible temperature, absolute zero, is -459.67 degrees F.
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Celsius Scale
A thermometer reading zero degrees in Celsius MarianVejcik/iStock/GettyImages
Outside the United States, most of the world uses the Celsius scale to measure temperatures. Two versions of the Celsius scale were created in the early 18th century – one by Swedish scientist Anders Celsius, and another by the French Jean Pierre Cristin. The Celsius scale is sometimes referred to as the centigrade scale, because it is based on a 100 degree division between the freezing and boiling points of water: water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and boils at 100 degrees C. Because of how the boiling and freezing points are arranged, each degree of Fahrenheit is 1.8 times the size of a degree Celsius. Like Fahrenheit, Celsius includes negative temperatures. Absolute zero falls at -273.15 degrees C.