Temperature Converter: Convert Between Temperature Units
Convert between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin
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A temperature converter translates a value between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin. Celsius and Fahrenheit are both relative scales pinned to the phase transitions of water, while Kelvin is the absolute scale starting from zero motion at the atomic level. The conversion formulas are exact, not rounded.
This calculator provides instant, accurate conversions between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin, essential for various applications from scientific research to daily life. It leverages standard International System of Units (SI) definitions to ensure precision. Celsius and Fahrenheit are relative scales, anchored to water's phase transitions, while Kelvin is an absolute scale starting at zero molecular motion. The tool helps users quickly translate temperatures for international recipes, weather reports, scientific experiments, or engineering calculations, ensuring consistency with global standards maintained by bodies like NIST and BIPM. Enter a value in any of the three units to see its precise equivalents.
What is a temperature?
Use this temperature converter to switch between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin in one place. This tool provides instant, accurate conversions, making it indispensable for a many applications, from following international recipes and understanding global weather reports to performing scientific calculations and planning travel. Enter a temperature in any of the three scales—Celsius (°C), Fahrenheit (°F), or Kelvin (K)—and instantly view its precise equivalent in the other two. The underlying conversion formulas (F = 9/5·C + 32, K = C + 273.15, and their inverse forms) are based on the standard International System of Units (SI) definitions, ensuring reliability and consistency with global scientific and engineering practices. These definitions are meticulously maintained by bodies like the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), guaranteeing the accuracy of every conversion.
The formula
- C — degrees Celsius
- F — degrees Fahrenheit
- K — kelvin (absolute scale)
Source: International System of Units (SI) definitions for temperature scales.
Worked examples
1Room temperature
22°C is 71.6°F — the lower end of U.S. indoor comfort ranges and the upper end of Northern European ones. In kelvin it's 295.15 K. Room temperature is where most physical chemistry measurements are calibrated.
2Water boiling at altitude
At the summit of many popular mountains (~2,400 m), water boils at about 93°C rather than 100°C because atmospheric pressure is lower. That's 199.4°F — cool enough that most pasta takes measurably longer to cook.
3Human body temperature
The average human body temperature is 98.6°F, which converts to 37°C and 310.15 K. Slight variations are normal, but significant deviations can indicate health issues.
How to use this calculator
- Value (default: 25)
- From unit (default: C)
- Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.
Common mistakes and edge cases
Treating a temperature difference and a temperature as the same thing. A 20°C temperature difference equals a 36°F temperature difference, not 68°F. The 32 offset only matters for absolute values; for deltas, multiply by 9/5 without adding.
Forgetting that Kelvin doesn't use a degree symbol. Write 'K' or '300 K', not '°K' or '300°K' — the International System of Units officially dropped the degree symbol in 1967.
Frequently asked questions
Why does the US use Fahrenheit?
Is Kelvin the correct 'scientific' temperature?
Can temperature be negative in Kelvin?
What is absolute zero?
Why is Kelvin important in science?
How do you convert Celsius to Fahrenheit?
How do you convert Fahrenheit to Celsius?
What's the difference between temperature and heat?
Temperature glossary
How we built this calculator
Methodology
Celsius and Fahrenheit are both linear scales based on two reference points. Celsius pins 0° to the freezing point of water and 100° to the boiling point at standard atmospheric pressure, giving a 100-degree range between phases. Fahrenheit pins 32° and 212° to the same two points, giving a 180-degree range — so each Fahrenheit degree is 5/9 of a Celsius degree.
This calculator was written by Numora conversion team and reviewed by Numora physics team before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.
Sources & references
Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) – SI UnitsUSA
- International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) – The International System of Units (SI)INT
- Royal Society of Chemistry – Temperature ScalesUK
- American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) – Fundamentals HandbookUSA
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