Ah yes.
Using the Celsius scale offset by ~273.15 must be the most galaxy brain shit I've ever seen.
Ah yes.
Using the Celsius scale offset by ~273.15 must be the most galaxy brain shit I've ever seen.
The meme is that room temperature in kelvin is a bigger number than in Celsius and Fahrenheit
It's so odd to use that expression in Fahrenheit though. 70 is by definition just as likely as 130.
I went to a school where the admission requirement by law is IQ 130, and it's not like you'd see the kids as fundamentally different from you if you're within 1std of the mean (85-115, which is 68% of the population).
An IQ of nearly 300 seems pretty galaxy brain imo.
no degrees! So much improve!
Celsius came before we invented absolute zero. What else were we supposed to do?
And where does poor Rankine sit?
It took someone with a room temperature IQ expressed in Rankine (530-540) to make this meme.
Is that like the heat equivalent of gradians?
Kelvin starts at absolute zero and proceeds on the Celsius scale.
Rankine starts at absolute zero and proceeds on the Fahrenheit scale.
Oh god kill it
What an abomination
But the Freedom™ 🇺🇲🦅
It was named after the Scotsman that developed it. Furthermore, I've never seen it used in any practical application here in the US.
The only time I've ever seen it used was practice questions from my thermodynamics textbooks when Imperial units were used (alongside the wonderfully awful to use BTU which doesn't translate well with anything).
I've never seen Rankine actually used anywhere otherwise.
Rankine sits outside with the fahrneheiters, where they belong.
Everyone forgets about the most important and sane scale ever created, the Réaumur scale.
As it should be:
Edit: for the love of god, it's a meme community. Of course it's not better. I hoped that we don't have to use the terrible /s bullshit here. ohmygod people, think for a second.
Why is 80 better than 100?
Edit: OK so it was originally using thermometers with alcohol that would boil at 80 but when thermometer makers switched to other liquids they kept the boiling point the same but for water instead...
Why most sane?
The Réaumur scale (French pronunciation: [ʁeomy(ː)ʁ]; °Ré, °Re, °r), also known as the "octogesimal division",[1] is a temperature scale for which the melting and boiling points of water are defined as 0 and 80 degrees respectively.
80 degrees is not the boiling temperature of water everywhere due to pressure differences. This means it doesn't have it's "superior" meaning everywhere.
It's usually defined at sea level
I don't live at sea level. Why is it superior at my location? 😊 I'm not convinced
Edit: appearantly it was a joke