Please support this site by disabling or whitelisting the Adblock for "justintools.com". I've spent over 10 trillion microseconds (and counting), on this project. This site is my passion, and I regularly adding new tools/apps. Users experience is very important, that's why I use non-intrusive ads. Any feedback is appreciated. Thank you. Justin XoXo :)
The Reaumur scale, symbol (°Ré, °Re, °r), also known as the "octogesimal division", is a temperature scale for which the freezing and boiling points of water are defined ..more definition+
The Celsius scale, also known as the centigrade scale, is an SI scale and unit of measurement for temperature. As an SI derived unit, it is used by most countries in the ..more definition+
In relation to the base unit of [temperature] => (kelvin), 1 Reaumur (°Re) is equal to 274.4 kelvin, while 1 Celsius (°C) = 274.15 kelvin.1 Reaumur | to common temperature units |
---|---|
1 °Re | = 1.25 celsius (°C) |
1 °Re | = 274.4 kelvin (K) |
1 °Re | = 34.25 fahrenheit (°F) |
1 °Re | = 493.92 rankine (°R) |
1 °Re | = 148.125 delisle (°De) |
1 °Re | = 0.4125 newton scale (°N) |
1 °Re | = 1 reaumur (°Re) |
1 °Re | = 8.15625 romer (°Rø) |
Reaumur | to Celsius (table conversion) |
---|---|
1 °Re | = 1.25 °C |
2 °Re | = 2.5 °C |
3 °Re | = 3.75 °C |
4 °Re | = 5 °C |
5 °Re | = 6.25 °C |
6 °Re | = 7.5 °C |
7 °Re | = 8.75 °C |
8 °Re | = 10 °C |
9 °Re | = 11.25 °C |
10 °Re | = 12.5 °C |
20 °Re | = 25 °C |
30 °Re | = 37.5 °C |
40 °Re | = 50 °C |
50 °Re | = 62.5 °C |
60 °Re | = 75 °C |
70 °Re | = 87.5 °C |
80 °Re | = 100 °C |
90 °Re | = 112.5 °C |
100 °Re | = 125 °C |
200 °Re | = 250 °C |
300 °Re | = 375 °C |
400 °Re | = 500 °C |
500 °Re | = 625 °C |
600 °Re | = 750 °C |
700 °Re | = 875 °C |
800 °Re | = 1000 °C |
900 °Re | = 1125 °C |
1000 °Re | = 1250 °C |
2000 °Re | = 2500 °C |
4000 °Re | = 5000 °C |
5000 °Re | = 6250 °C |
7500 °Re | = 9375 °C |
10000 °Re | = 12500 °C |
25000 °Re | = 31250 °C |
50000 °Re | = 62500 °C |
100000 °Re | = 125000 °C |
1000000 °Re | = 1250000 °C |
1000000000 °Re | = 1250000000 °C |