Fetus4188
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- Apr 16, 2004
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Fahrenheit designed a scale that would be easy to standardize and produce. He chose 32 degrees for freezing because it could be easily divided into halves again and again to get 1 unit increments. The scale was decided by setting 96 to body temperature (obviously he was a little off). This gave him 64 unit that can again be evenly divided into halves. Freezing and body are temperatures that are easy to use for calibrating the thermometers and the powers of 2 allowed for accurate increments.Che Guava said:How is celcius imprecise? At 1 atm, water boils at 100, and freezes at 0, not to mention that each celcius degree is equal to one kelvin. Easy as pie.
Gabriel Farhenheit simply measured the 'coldest temperature he could imagine' for 0 degrees (supposedly outdoors in winter in Germany) and used his own body temperature for 100 degrees (which he got wrong, since body temp in F is 98.6). It's 5/9 of a kelvin.