Convert Newton (°N) to Celsius (°C)
Conversion:
1 Newton (°N) = 3.0303030303 Celsius (°C)
How to Convert Newton (°N) to Celsius (°C)
1 n = 3.0303030303 c
1 c = 0.33 n
Example: convert 15 Newton (°N) to Celsius (°C):
25 n = 75.757575758 c
Newton (°N) to Celsius (°C) Conversion Table
| Newton (°N) | Celsius (°C) |
|---|---|
| 0.01 n | 0.030303030303 c |
| 0.1 n | 0.30303030303 c |
| 1 n | 3.0303030303 c |
| 2 n | 6.0606060606 c |
| 3 n | 9.0909090909 c |
| 5 n | 15.151515152 c |
| 10 n | 30.303030303 c |
| 20 n | 60.606060606 c |
| 50 n | 151.51515152 c |
| 100 n | 303.03030303 c |
| 1000 n | 3030.3030303 c |
Newton (°N)
Definition
Newton (°N) is a temperature scale where 0°N equals the freezing point of water and 33°N equals the boiling point of water.
History
The Newton scale was devised around 1700 by Sir Isaac Newton. It was one of the earliest attempts to create a standardized temperature scale and predates both Fahrenheit and Celsius.
Current use
The Newton temperature scale is not used in any modern practical application. It is studied in the history of science and thermometry as an early example of temperature standardization.
Celsius (°C)
Definition
Celsius (°C) is a metric temperature scale where 0°C is the freezing point of water and 100°C is the boiling point of water at standard atmospheric pressure.
History
The Celsius scale was proposed in 1742 by Anders Celsius, a Swedish astronomer. His original scale was inverted (0° for boiling, 100° for freezing), and was later reversed by Carl Linnaeus or Daniel Ekström.
Current use
Celsius is the most widely used temperature scale in the world, standard in most countries for weather forecasts, cooking, scientific research, and everyday temperature measurements. Only the US, Liberia, and the Cayman Islands primarily use Fahrenheit.