When you go from 22C to 23C, you go from 71,6F to 73,4F. See that argument makes no sense (which is why I assume this video is satire) Also I wonder when we talk about the freezing point of water in relation to the weather 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
Well it makes some sense, because the degree intetvals are a bit too large. Whereas in farenheit, you hardly ever care about the decimels since you usually do not feel an air temperature difference smaller than a degree F.
@@the_trouble_gamer yes, because water freezes at 0°C and thats the temperature when it‘s snowing, when the road is frozen and slippery, so it is relatively easy to know when you should drive slower than normal. (It can be frozen at about 3°C, because the groud or so can be colder).
İndeed. İt's much easier to realize when you should refrain from cold. Heat takes care of itself no matter what you're using. Knowing when you will very likely freeze is quite important.
@@siisjwj7647Not really. Both have its advantages. For example, for central Europeans it’s helpful to know when the temperature gets below zero Celsius, because that’s when the roads become slippery and you have to get up earlier next morning to get rid of the ice that’s probably on your car. Also, it’s very easy to convert Celsius to Kelvin, the measurement for science. Apart from that it’s just what you grew up with. There’s no objectively better system for temperature.
@@lilysnape6520 you can convert temperature in celsius degrees to kelvins just by adding to temperature in celsius 273, 'cause 1 kelvin equals to 1 celsius degree. That is why people around the world use celsius scale as a base, it is just a good compromise between normal life and science. American system is an abomination.
Ok 😂😂 Totally disagree of course. I grew up In Germany and it’s just that you get used to Celsius in Europe so much that learning anything else is just painful. It seems like it really depends on with what you grow up with. Especially if you live in Germany or in Sweden or in all those northern European countries: It’s just important to know when temperatures drop below 0. Why? Cause when it’s winter and it’s freezing 0 dergree will be the most dangerous time to drive your car. So you should better know when temperatures are at that point. ❄️
I don't know a place that doesn't have salt and I grew up in the south. As soon as you lay that down, your 0 degrees is completely pointless. But you know what temperature it does start freezing at with salt? It starts with a 0 and ends with an F☺️
@@debby9610 I actually live in the north now, if you think salt isn't still a life saver then you just not be driving yourself, or you're just ignorant to the things going on around you. It's drops freezing point by 32 degrees making 0-32F safe to drive in. It's possible your area is cheaping out and not using enough salt for the space, but the math is the math and I've personally seen it in action many times every year
@@debby9610 what's really likely happening is that they aren't using enough salt to counter the amount of snow(as you need a certain volume of salt per volume of water/ice/snow). If you predict 3 inches, salt for 3 inches, and then get 6 inches, then you're right it's not gonna do much
@@kwame20101 Doesn’t matter. If temperatures drop below 0 there’s ice on the street. And that’s the important information your looking for if you leave the house on a cool February morning 😂 in northern Europe. If I would use Fahrenheit now that I grew up using Celsius all the time - I would definitely have no clue how warm or cold it actually is. So: No thank you 😄
@@jay2masteryt769 fahrenheit is in base 32. That's horrible for basically anything that isn't the imperial system used in like 3 countries. I can understand opposition for switching because you would have to retool entire country with huge economy, but in every day use metric is way superior for one single reason, percentages and fractions. I'm cooking at a restaurant, i have 1kg of rice on the ready and 0.7kg of chicken and 0.45kg of veggies, every portion should be 0.475kg with 0.2 rice 0.14kg meat 0.075 vegge, how many do I have? You can instantly see just looking at it that 5 with like 125g of vegge left so i order my right hand to cook up more rice and meat for 2 portions and add a handful (25g) more vegge and we done with this order. Now try the same with 2lb 4oz of rice 24oz of meet and 1lb of vegge, let's round up portion to 1lb to make it easier but I'm still not even gonna try to do this match in my head
A cube filled with water with an edge length of 10 cm has a volume of 1 liter, weighs 1 kilogram and requires 1 kilocalorie to warm up by 1 degree Celsius.
@@Nokyyyyy Speaking facts right here. They could just round up or down. I doubt the temperature is always perfectly 80 degrees farenheit, or 10 degrees celcius. Though I say this just for checking to see the weather outside, not science and stuff 😂
Bro, you also need Celsius in maths and physics. There have been literally NASA space rockets exploding because of conversion mistakes in using Farenheit.
@@50shadesofcc27 nein bro he needs a few more decades in Deutschland, Celsius is by far superior to Fahrenheit, if I'm not mistaken more of the world uses Celsius than Fahrenheit which would make Fahrenheit obsolete in the rest of the world 😅
Gabriel Fahrenheit took his own body temperature as the fixpoint for 100°F It was not inventet to be used to measure specifically the air temperature, he just wanted something to scale temperature at all The fixpoint for 0°F was the lowest temperature he could measure at his time... So this is a really bad basis for measuring temperature
Your reasoning is so crazy flawed 😂 And Celsius has nothing to do with the metric system 🥴 On the other hand if you know 0=freezing that just makes sense, everything in the plus is above freezing cold and everything negative is cold AF. 0 is a reference point anyone can understand, in Fahrenheit you have to be familiar with it for it to make sense.
@@randygebreith2085 the metric system is based around the Gramm and Meter (weight and distance) even the Gramm part is derived from the mass water has in a cubic centimeter (hints metric system) Celsius as far as I know is based on the height an pressure, like water boils at a 100 Celsius at see level. But I am no expert just live in a country where they have both, so I could be mistaken 🤷🏽♂️
@@member3398 hey man I really appreciate your comments, and I actually know that these days they use cosmic constants as reference. I just wanted to explain why it’s called the metric system and it’s exactly because of the above mentioned reasons. But still at the end of the day Celsius is no fixed part of the metric system and is just used in the same county’s. You are actually right about the kelvin thing but even kelvin is not originally part of the metric system (hints why you have to google SI base units instead of metric system to get temperature involved).
@@curlyfries2956 cool thing, but what does it say about the environment you will find yourself in? If you tell someone it's 10 degrees Fahrenheit they might know it is cold, but everything else has to come from familiarity with the system. But if it's cloudy and below 0 degrees Celsius you know that you might see it snowing, or that there might be ice on the road, and so on. In most cases air has the same properties no matter the weather, so why would it be more useful?
if you live north of the northern line, then you probably can expect some negative Fahrenheit temperatures, is what he probably wants to say with this map ... while the southern line doesn't make sense in this context, because it seems to be the equator... and 1000km south of the equator is approximately the same temperature range as 1000km north of the equator. In order for that map to make sense, there should be two lines with the equator in the middle between them.
If the temp is 50°C out, you know it's half way to boiling. And if it's in the negatives overnight, you know you have to look out for ice. Beyond that, we use Celcius for cooking, so yeah, the scale makes sense
The difference between 80 and 81 Fahrenheit is so insignificant, that no one on this earth would be able to tell the difference. Celsius is just better
It works both ways, going from 22 degrees Celcius to 23 degrees Celsius is going from 71.6 degrees Fahrenheit to 73.4 degrees Fahrenheit. Nobody uses decimals with either system in normal life, they only come up if you're doing conversions.
@@savitar8002 Why? Below 0F, very dangerous to humans without careful planning, frostbite can set in on exposed skin very quickly. Above 100F, body fluids are depleted very quickly so regular dehydrating and frequent breaks inside to cool off are recommended to avoid dangerous overheating.The same range in Celsius is -18 to 38. Every difference of ~10F usually results in a change of outfit to accommodate that temperature. So 70s results in one outfit, 60s results in another, etc. In that way F is kind of base 10 as ten degrees is a big enough difference to require a change in behavior.
@@savitar8002 I just explained why it can make sense for air temperature for weather forecasts, you're just being willfully ignorant: T100 = very bad for humans. 0
Oh man! When do we talk about wartet? We talk about 100 degree whenever we cook and about 0 degrees whenever we don't want to crash our cars or fall face first on our asses. Think thats enough.
You round numbers why tf do you have to give the smallest change in temperature a whole ass new number its basiccally the same and also in water there's a zero point in weather there is no 0 there cold and warm so it doesn't make sense
"when do we talk about the temperature of water?" all the time bro, do you not cook for yourself? does it not snow or rain in the cold months where you live? Has a street never frozen over during winter?? it's way more intuitive for our surrounding
No its not though. Think of it as %hot. 0%hot(0°F), is very cold. 100%hot(100°F) is very hot. The state of water at 0° has absolutely no bearing on how you feel. The earth will never get to 100°C. Using at best 1/3(without negative numbers)of a 0-100 scale means its a bad system of measurement. And also temperatures in most of the world routinely get below 0°C. Its fairly rare for most places to get below 0°F.
“Oh no healthcare blah blah blah” it’s almost like every other time we’ve put our health in the hands of the government we’ve ended up with situations like the black population being infected with syphilis. This is why us black brothers don’t trust the government for nothin. We remain self sufficient 💪🏾
@@curlyfries2956 it was a study performed on black people... ya know during a certain time called... fuck I forgot, was it kim drow segregation? Phil Row segregation? Idk man, I can't be bothered to look it up. My point is that it's during the yee olde blatantly racist times and was recognized as unethical. Also it was used as a carrot on a stick, something that most "non-free" nations (that is you have the freedom of becoming homeless or bankrupt) don't have and the UK has it's healthcare, even when there is the disproportionate treatment of people, Tories dismantling it and yada yada yada. Even with that, it's not that much different than the US except this one is free for anyone. And it's absolutely ironic the US can't even spare pennies on the well being of its people, while ramping up their military budget to comically large budgets, ones that could not be conceived of by the normal human brain.
actually we should use Kelvin (as this scale is the only one stating at 0 where it's actually the coldest), but 273 is a difficult number to memorize, so we use a system that is shifted 273 points upwards, namely Celsius.
the celsius scale is simply a transfer of the kelvin scale to everyday life. Which makes everything a lot easier when you work in a scientific field because you don't have to think big
Oh yes you do need the 0°C for water often since you always know when there are freezing temperatures without having to think about where to cut the line
I remember the first time I tried to do an online recipe and it said " pre-heat to 500 degrees" and was like "how much degrees???" and then I looked on the main page and "oh, it's an American site. Makes sense"
What in the world recipe said 500 degrees! I can’t think of any recipe that would call for that. Not even sure the oven goes up to that. The highest temperature I have ever used was 450 degrees. Most recipes call for between 350 and 425 degrees.
Negative Celsius: freezing🥶 Below 10: Bring a jacket! About 15: a Hoodie is fine! 20 or above: T-Shirt weather! 30: you better stay at Home if you can't deal with hot temperatures🥵...
As a science student, when you gotta calculate a given temperature in Kelvin degrees, for °C it's just +273. I don't even wanna know what mental gymnastics Americans go through to find K from °F. Also the decimals appear because of the conversion. If you convert °C to °F you're gonna get decimals too. I can't find any downsides to using °C our system is just superior 😤
0°C is the triple point of water at 1bar, not only the freezing point. The scale up to 100°C references the last phase change of water at 1bar and thus sets the scale. So in fact Celsius is a scientific measurement of temperatur and is based on reproducable laws of physics, which isn't true for the scale of Fahrenheit.
Low argumentation of a guy from america not wondering. And btw. celcius is easier to transform into kelvin whats more important then fahrenheit. And Fahrenheit was invented from a german scientist soo we decide whats better and this is celcius.
Bro when it comes to weather, the difference between 71 F and 72 F is negligible, no one can tell the difference, and the humidity in the air can effect the feeling of the weather more than that one or two degrees difference anyways. We really gain nothing by having more precision afforded by using fahrenheit. However, using celsius helps us cook with more precision, know when it will snow easily, communicate with the rest of the world easier, convert to Kelvin easily (same scale as celsius and is the standard for scientists!) and in general is easier to get a feeling for. This is coming from an American who knows both.
You‘re not just wrong, you‘re super wrong
Genau bruder
@@rubinkoerper441 so macht man das
@@rubinkoerper441 Einfach Fakten
Da versammeln sich die Deutschen
zusammenhalten
Celsius is better
Edit:Mom You son is rich
Temps outside are negative Celsius, stuff starts freezing. It makes perfect sense.
@@michaelculley8790 yes it does
True
I agree
Anyway Kelvin is SI base unit😂😂😂
When you go from 22C to 23C, you go from 71,6F to 73,4F. See that argument makes no sense (which is why I assume this video is satire)
Also I wonder when we talk about the freezing point of water in relation to the weather 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
When there is sniw of course
@@redgum3076 i never saw sniw
@@redgum3076 exactly!!!
Well it makes some sense, because the degree intetvals are a bit too large. Whereas in farenheit, you hardly ever care about the decimels since you usually do not feel an air temperature difference smaller than a degree F.
@@kevley26 I'd argue 1°C difference is still very small, and you don't need more precision than that when it comes to weather
I disagree, we don’t talk about air too and humans are 70% water
You never check weather?
@@AaaaKrovushka weather also is determined by the temperature of water
@@the_trouble_gamer yes, because water freezes at 0°C and thats the temperature when it‘s snowing, when the road is frozen and slippery, so it is relatively easy to know when you should drive slower than normal. (It can be frozen at about 3°C, because the groud or so can be colder).
İndeed. İt's much easier to realize when you should refrain from cold. Heat takes care of itself no matter what you're using. Knowing when you will very likely freeze is quite important.
How often are you boiling humans?
Do chemistry or physics with Fahrenheit, good Luck
Well ...there you would use Kelvin
What about the average guy? Fahrenheit is so much better than Celsius for outside temperature
@@siisjwj7647Not really. Both have its advantages. For example, for central Europeans it’s helpful to know when the temperature gets below zero Celsius, because that’s when the roads become slippery and you have to get up earlier next morning to get rid of the ice that’s probably on your car. Also, it’s very easy to convert Celsius to Kelvin, the measurement for science.
Apart from that it’s just what you grew up with. There’s no objectively better system for temperature.
@@lilysnape6520 you can convert temperature in celsius degrees to kelvins just by adding to temperature in celsius 273, 'cause 1 kelvin equals to 1 celsius degree. That is why people around the world use celsius scale as a base, it is just a good compromise between normal life and science. American system is an abomination.
You primarily use Kelvin there but good attempt have a cookie
Ok 😂😂
Totally disagree of course. I grew up In Germany and it’s just that you get used to Celsius in Europe so much that learning anything else is just painful.
It seems like it really depends on with what you grow up with.
Especially if you live in Germany or in Sweden or in all those northern European countries: It’s just important to know when temperatures drop below 0.
Why? Cause when it’s winter and it’s freezing 0 dergree will be the most dangerous time to drive your car. So you should better know when temperatures are at that point. ❄️
I don't know a place that doesn't have salt and I grew up in the south. As soon as you lay that down, your 0 degrees is completely pointless. But you know what temperature it does start freezing at with salt? It starts with a 0 and ends with an F☺️
@@kwame20101 ou definitely didn't grow up in the north. When it's really snowing and freezing out there, salt won't help you anymore😅
@@debby9610 I actually live in the north now, if you think salt isn't still a life saver then you just not be driving yourself, or you're just ignorant to the things going on around you. It's drops freezing point by 32 degrees making 0-32F safe to drive in. It's possible your area is cheaping out and not using enough salt for the space, but the math is the math and I've personally seen it in action many times every year
@@debby9610 what's really likely happening is that they aren't using enough salt to counter the amount of snow(as you need a certain volume of salt per volume of water/ice/snow). If you predict 3 inches, salt for 3 inches, and then get 6 inches, then you're right it's not gonna do much
@@kwame20101 Doesn’t matter. If temperatures drop below 0 there’s ice on the street. And that’s the important information your looking for if you leave the house on a cool February morning 😂 in northern Europe.
If I would use Fahrenheit now that I grew up using Celsius all the time - I would definitely have no clue how warm or cold it actually is.
So: No thank you 😄
Me an intellectual: Kelvin is best
You sure are an intellectual
From Kelvin to Celsius formula : -273 (this number is stuck in my head 😅)
Don't know in Fahrenheit 😅
you're right, Kelvin is best, and just after Kelvin's is Celcius
There is a Kelvin equivalent for Fahrenheit. It‘s called Rankine.
Starting at absolute 0 and using the Fahrenheit increment.
@@jay2masteryt769 fahrenheit is in base 32. That's horrible for basically anything that isn't the imperial system used in like 3 countries. I can understand opposition for switching because you would have to retool entire country with huge economy, but in every day use metric is way superior for one single reason, percentages and fractions. I'm cooking at a restaurant, i have 1kg of rice on the ready and 0.7kg of chicken and 0.45kg of veggies, every portion should be 0.475kg with 0.2 rice 0.14kg meat 0.075 vegge, how many do I have? You can instantly see just looking at it that 5 with like 125g of vegge left so i order my right hand to cook up more rice and meat for 2 portions and add a handful (25g) more vegge and we done with this order. Now try the same with 2lb 4oz of rice 24oz of meet and 1lb of vegge, let's round up portion to 1lb to make it easier but I'm still not even gonna try to do this match in my head
A cube filled with water with an edge length of 10 cm has a volume of 1 liter, weighs 1 kilogram and requires 1 kilocalorie to warm up by 1 degree Celsius.
That's just perfection. Fahrenheit doesn't make any sense.
“1 fluid ounce or 0.12 Cups” shut up. Such a bad system. 1 to 1 to 1 nice
@@purememes844Except it isn’t 1 to 1 here
@@crsx1861don’t let zeroes scare you
What does this mean for everyday life though? For science it’s good but for air temp it is far superior and more logical to use F
Water is a great base as we use it everyday and it’s everywhere so Celsius and we finished 4th grade so decimals don’t matter
Also in everyday life you almost never see temperatures written with decimals
@@Enjoy-bn5jy you can't even notice the difference between 20°C and 21°C or barely too
@@Nokyyyyy Speaking facts right here. They could just round up or down. I doubt the temperature is always perfectly 80 degrees farenheit, or 10 degrees celcius. Though I say this just for checking to see the weather outside, not science and stuff 😂
@@Enjoy-bn5jy other than on thermometers
not to mention that roads can get ice on them when temperatures hit 0 Celsius and lower
Bro, you also need Celsius in maths and physics. There have been literally NASA space rockets exploding because of conversion mistakes in using Farenheit.
Absolutly True! Way easier as an international scientific System :)
@@rakner447 guess he needs a few more years in Deutschland 🇩🇪 🤣
@@50shadesofcc27 nein bro he needs a few more decades in Deutschland, Celsius is by far superior to Fahrenheit, if I'm not mistaken more of the world uses Celsius than Fahrenheit which would make Fahrenheit obsolete in the rest of the world 😅
Don't they use Kelvins?
you need kelvin in physics but thats easy to convert from celsius
And additionally ...celsius is used everywhere in the world as the standard ,so why stick to Fahrenheit?!
For the same reason they stay with imperial idiotic system
tHeRe arE tWo kiND oF coUnTries: oNe UseS meTrIc, tHe oTHer WeNt tO ThE mOoN
One idiot was bored and decided to create feet, gallons, miles, fahrenheit etc. and fucking confuse people
@@Kemloth but scientist and many engineers used the metric system
@@sebastianornjohannsson-8778 I know, that's why I wrote it in a retarded way ;)
scientists left the chat
Gabriel Fahrenheit took his own body temperature as the fixpoint for 100°F
It was not inventet to be used to measure specifically the air temperature, he just wanted something to scale temperature at all
The fixpoint for 0°F was the lowest temperature he could measure at his time...
So this is a really bad basis for measuring temperature
so it falls in line perfectly with all the other stupid units in the imperial system, invented and grabbed out of thin air for circumstancial reasons
This video both explained to me why the USA uses Fahrenheit and also why I prefer Celsius even more. God bless you!
Where is your brain brotha
Like Squidward did that time, he threw it in the trashcan
Why Fahrenheit is better than Celsius: It isn't.
Nah still celsius man
But the decimals are just there because you convert between the units, it would be the same the other way.
Yeah, my weather app never says it will be 23.6124°C today lol.
“Who wants ti deal with all those decimals”
No one does…
@@FullOfMalarkyOMG THAT'S SO COLD🥶 I'M SWEATING LIKE CRAZY HERE🥵
Ah yes it is 1 Celsius aka 38.888 Fahrenheit
Respect for admitting the honest truth at the end but unless you cant process negative temeratures, celsius > farenheit
Now convert Fahrenheit into Kelvin to do physics
Which is reason why Rankine is still in use because its basically Kelvin but with Fahrenheit scale.
@@alicethegrinsecatz6011 which is still undermined in collaborative works...
We could just switch to Rakine for science cause absolute zero is the same
ah yes, the melting and freezing point of air
Your reasoning is so crazy flawed 😂
And Celsius has nothing to do with the metric system 🥴
On the other hand if you know 0=freezing that just makes sense, everything in the plus is above freezing cold and everything negative is cold AF.
0 is a reference point anyone can understand, in Fahrenheit you have to be familiar with it for it to make sense.
what you mean it has nothing to do with the metric system, it is a fix part of it?
@@randygebreith2085 the metric system is based around the Gramm and Meter (weight and distance) even the Gramm part is derived from the mass water has in a cubic centimeter (hints metric system)
Celsius as far as I know is based on the height an pressure, like water boils at a 100 Celsius at see level.
But I am no expert just live in a country where they have both, so I could be mistaken 🤷🏽♂️
@@member3398 hey man I really appreciate your comments, and I actually know that these days they use cosmic constants as reference.
I just wanted to explain why it’s called the metric system and it’s exactly because of the above mentioned reasons.
But still at the end of the day Celsius is no fixed part of the metric system and is just used in the same county’s.
You are actually right about the kelvin thing but even kelvin is not originally part of the metric system (hints why you have to google SI base units instead of metric system to get
temperature involved).
It’s used because of the temperature of the air, which in the area he showed, the air temperature ranges from 0 to 100 degrees Fahrenheit
@@curlyfries2956 cool thing, but what does it say about the environment you will find yourself in? If you tell someone it's 10 degrees Fahrenheit they might know it is cold, but everything else has to come from familiarity with the system.
But if it's cloudy and below 0 degrees Celsius you know that you might see it snowing, or that there might be ice on the road, and so on.
In most cases air has the same properties no matter the weather, so why would it be more useful?
What if you dont live in between the two lines 😐😐😐😶😶😶
Celsius
Get back in line!
if you live north of the northern line, then you probably can expect some negative Fahrenheit temperatures, is what he probably wants to say with this map ... while the southern line doesn't make sense in this context, because it seems to be the equator... and 1000km south of the equator is approximately the same temperature range as 1000km north of the equator. In order for that map to make sense, there should be two lines with the equator in the middle between them.
When the Temperature in the winter drops below 0 degree in the winter you will know to close outside waterpiplines so that they dont burst.
Who needs 27.222 celsius when you can just say 27 celsius, theres like no difference
Celsius is better, in Canada when it goes below zero we know it’s gonna snow, it’s just easier
You use Celsius in 🇨🇦 ? That’s cool. Didn’t know that! 👍🏼
If the temp is 50°C out, you know it's half way to boiling. And if it's in the negatives overnight, you know you have to look out for ice. Beyond that, we use Celcius for cooking, so yeah, the scale makes sense
The difference between 80 and 81 Fahrenheit is so insignificant, that no one on this earth would be able to tell the difference. Celsius is just better
So it's a more refined scale.
Kelvin is still the best
Yeah true idk why not everyone uses it
I love myself some 273K ice cold beer!
And Kelvin got the distance of 1 degree from Celsius. It's just shifted up.
Celsius is much better
Funfact: Fahrenheit Was invented in Germany.
Me: *living in europe and only knowing Celsius* I didn't understand a single word about Fahrenheit 😀
Even when someome explains it to me I still don’t understand fahrenheit
There is a reason why we use Kelvin and Celsius in science...
It works both ways, going from 22 degrees Celcius to 23 degrees Celsius is going from 71.6 degrees Fahrenheit to 73.4 degrees Fahrenheit. Nobody uses decimals with either system in normal life, they only come up if you're doing conversions.
The last thing can also be said the other way around
What?
Could be applied to every argument he made 😂
@@kingjs_420 Yeah fahrenheit is just the irregular one if you compare it with celsius and kelvin
Celcius makes more sense
For water yes,air temperature no
@@Ltc92514
For both it makes sense.
@@savitar8002 Why?
Below 0F, very dangerous to humans without careful planning, frostbite can set in on exposed skin very quickly. Above 100F, body fluids are depleted very quickly so regular dehydrating and frequent breaks inside to cool off are recommended to avoid dangerous overheating.The same range in Celsius is -18 to 38.
Every difference of ~10F usually results in a change of outfit to accommodate that temperature. So 70s results in one outfit, 60s results in another, etc. In that way F is kind of base 10 as ten degrees is a big enough difference to require a change in behavior.
@@GuardianOwl
0 is freezing point
100 is boiling point
It is easy to read celcius
Farenheit doesn't make sense
@@savitar8002 I just explained why it can make sense for air temperature for weather forecasts, you're just being willfully ignorant:
T100 = very bad for humans.
0
If you convert C to F you’ll get decimals as well
Oh man! When do we talk about wartet? We talk about 100 degree whenever we cook and about 0 degrees whenever we don't want to crash our cars or fall face first on our asses. Think thats enough.
Petition to ban Fahrenheit
You round numbers why tf do you have to give the smallest change in temperature a whole ass new number its basiccally the same and also in water there's a zero point in weather there is no 0 there cold and warm so it doesn't make sense
"when do we talk about the temperature of water?" all the time bro, do you not cook for yourself? does it not snow or rain in the cold months where you live? Has a street never frozen over during winter?? it's way more intuitive for our surrounding
No its not though. Think of it as %hot. 0%hot(0°F), is very cold. 100%hot(100°F) is very hot. The state of water at 0° has absolutely no bearing on how you feel. The earth will never get to 100°C. Using at best 1/3(without negative numbers)of a 0-100 scale means its a bad system of measurement. And also temperatures in most of the world routinely get below 0°C. Its fairly rare for most places to get below 0°F.
1 calorie (the unit u see in many foods and drinks) is the energy required to raised 1 gram of water by 1 Celsius at 1 standard atmosphere.
It admittedly kinda sucks and I'd rather just stick to joules.
Imagine being an American that can not even spell "Healthcare" speaking about Fahrenheit being better xD
Your comment makes absolutely zero sense.
@@theguywhoasked5591 0 Kelvin or Celsius?
“Oh no healthcare blah blah blah” it’s almost like every other time we’ve put our health in the hands of the government we’ve ended up with situations like the black population being infected with syphilis. This is why us black brothers don’t trust the government for nothin. We remain self sufficient 💪🏾
@@curlyfries2956 it was a study performed on black people... ya know during a certain time called... fuck I forgot, was it kim drow segregation? Phil Row segregation? Idk man, I can't be bothered to look it up. My point is that it's during the yee olde blatantly racist times and was recognized as unethical.
Also it was used as a carrot on a stick, something that most "non-free" nations (that is you have the freedom of becoming homeless or bankrupt) don't have and the UK has it's healthcare, even when there is the disproportionate treatment of people, Tories dismantling it and yada yada yada. Even with that, it's not that much different than the US except this one is free for anyone.
And it's absolutely ironic the US can't even spare pennies on the well being of its people, while ramping up their military budget to comically large budgets, ones that could not be conceived of by the normal human brain.
Bruh we dont say
27,222C°
We either round up or down or just say the last number behind the ,
Bro graduated from the dumpster outside of McDonald's😂😂😂
Let me tel you why Celsius ist better.
Because when we talk about the temperature in Celsius, we can literally imagine how cold or hot there is.
actually we should use Kelvin (as this scale is the only one stating at 0 where it's actually the coldest), but 273 is a difficult number to memorize, so we use a system that is shifted 273 points upwards, namely Celsius.
Celsius man
I showed this my physical teacher he just look disappointed of humanity
Well in the far North it's so cold that the Celcius is just more useful
the thing is; they both have good elements. 100 is a better way to say hot but 38 isn’t a very good way to say super cold
Celcius way Vetter
i dont understand why this should be better
Fahrenheit doesn't have decimals? Of course it does, it's not like that magically doesn't exist.
Doesn't mean it's better just because you're used to it.
Nah man I'll stick to Celsius :')
The most American thing I heard in a long time
So true 😂
Fahrenheit is how you feel. Celsius is how water feels.
Every time it snows, you think of water, every time it rains, it’s water again. It’s always water
Celsius 🔥
Kelvin🔥🔥🔥
Water = Rain
0 °C = Snow
Celsius > Fahrenheit
Wtf you just say it goes from 26 to 27 😂
European navigation:
After 350 meters, turn right
American navigation:
After 7 olympic pools, turn right
Have fun in physics class when you have to transfer your Fahrenheit to Kelvin, which is literally Celsius - 273,15
In *everyday use* Fahrenheit is better
@@kothen4994not true
@@jimmym1453yes it is.68 F =20C. 69F , 20.5C. In everyday use that doesn’t cut it
Everyday life isn’t spent in Physics class.
Dude.. I don't even know where to start 😅
the celsius scale is simply a transfer of the kelvin scale to everyday life. Which makes everything a lot easier when you work in a scientific field because you don't have to think big
It was plus 5C during the day, but -18C at night. Guess who's car got stuck in a puddle?
Freezing point matters in some places 😂
Germans don't learn what's "easier", we learn what's more correct.
There's nothing incorrect about fahrenheit.
Amazing, every word that came out of you mouth was wrong. Superwrong
Oh yes you do need the 0°C for water often since you always know when there are freezing temperatures without having to think about where to cut the line
I remember the first time I tried to do an online recipe and it said " pre-heat to 500 degrees" and was like "how much degrees???" and then I looked on the main page and "oh, it's an American site. Makes sense"
What in the world recipe said 500 degrees! I can’t think of any recipe that would call for that. Not even sure the oven goes up to that. The highest temperature I have ever used was 450 degrees. Most recipes call for between 350 and 425 degrees.
@@samantha9446 I just threw a number out there, but the point stays the same: way to high if you think in Celsius 😂
"Tell me your American without telling me your American"
Water is more common to consider that the average range of temperature between certain latitudes...
Bros nose is taking up 99% of his brain power
In Celsius you don't use numbers Like 26,667c°, you use Numbers like 26,6c°
I’ve literally never heard anyone say ‘it’s 26.6° outside’ because it’d be either 26 or 27
I've never seen or heard anyone use decimal points of celcius except for scientist maybe.
Negative Celsius: freezing🥶
Below 10: Bring a jacket!
About 15: a Hoodie is fine!
20 or above: T-Shirt weather!
30: you better stay at Home if you can't deal with hot temperatures🥵...
Videos like these make me rethink if free speech is a good idea
Celsius goes up in increments the same as Degrees Kelvin which makes calculations easier
So at which temperature you have to expect snow? Or ice on the street?
Bro no one talks about the temperature of air in decimals
Nah man you just trying to make Europeans mad😂
Just like your measurement in feet...like dude are you just rounding up all the time 😂
As a science student, when you gotta calculate a given temperature in Kelvin degrees, for °C it's just +273. I don't even wanna know what mental gymnastics Americans go through to find K from °F. Also the decimals appear because of the conversion. If you convert °C to °F you're gonna get decimals too. I can't find any downsides to using °C our system is just superior 😤
Only idiots who want things to be more complicated doesn't use Celsius
Reporting for promoting terrorism gang
👇
My guy disrespecting everyone who isn’t American
Celsius is better because when the number is lower its colder and when the number is higher its hotter makes sense to me
this Guy has never calculated any chemical reactions in high school
you will adapt to Celsius, trust me it's better... its more reasonable to
Celsius better gang
👇
0°C is the triple point of water at 1bar, not only the freezing point.
The scale up to 100°C references the last phase change of water at 1bar and thus sets the scale.
So in fact Celsius is a scientific measurement of temperatur and is based on reproducable laws of physics, which isn't true for the scale of Fahrenheit.
Bruv no one uses decimal things we just don't say it
This literally makes no sense at all, considering that water is the source of all live we ever knew.
Low argumentation of a guy from america not wondering. And btw. celcius is easier to transform into kelvin whats more important then fahrenheit. And Fahrenheit was invented from a german scientist soo we decide whats better and this is celcius.
You are just not used to Celsius.
Fahrenheit is super arbitrary.
Whoever thinks Fahrenheit is better than Celsius: 🤡
Bro when it comes to weather, the difference between 71 F and 72 F is negligible, no one can tell the difference, and the humidity in the air can effect the feeling of the weather more than that one or two degrees difference anyways. We really gain nothing by having more precision afforded by using fahrenheit.
However, using celsius helps us cook with more precision, know when it will snow easily, communicate with the rest of the world easier, convert to Kelvin easily (same scale as celsius and is the standard for scientists!) and in general is easier to get a feeling for. This is coming from an American who knows both.
Celsius is also way easier to convert to Kelvin