That'd be Celsius. On Celsius, zero degrees indicates the freezing point of water, and 100 degrees indicates the boiling point of water. On Fahrenheit, zero indicates the freezing point of a part water, part salt mixture, and the freezing point of water is 30 degrees. Kalvin doesn't use degrees. 0 Kalvin means zero thermal energy, and the freezing point of water is 273 Kalvin.
I'm going to blame my ignorance on the fact I did Physics and not Chemistry...that's a valid excuse right?
To be fair, physics and Chemistry go hand-in-hand. Understanding one necessitates the understanding of the other. Then again, I will not claim to "understand" all of Physics.
I don't claim to understand any of Physics...Mainly cause I don't, yet I'm still managing to scrape through with a B+, Ridiculous leap's of logic, AWAY!!!
I never knew anyone in my life who used celsius instead of fahrenheit. I still don't even know how to convert one to the other. Never even heard of Kalvin. I took Environmental Science and Marine Biology in school because they were easy as hell. Lots of field trips, do-nothing work, as well as disecting fish/squid/etc and eating them in class. It did get a little weird when some kid stomped on one of the dead fish we were working on.
I studied Arts so... Physics and Chemistry are not my business ^^ Good morning everybody! I'm hungry... Let's have a nice breakfast
A sausage patty with egg and cheese between 2 croissants with a side of mixed berry Yoplait yogurt and some cranberry juice. That is the perfect breakfast.
Dear Celestia that sound's delicious. It's times like these I minorly revise my decision to be vegetarian...and then don't, Because pineapples. (Trying to figure out how that makes sense? Here's a hint: Don't!)
I tried some hard candy bacon recently and it was awful. It tasted like raw pork and pure sugar straight out of the bag. Those bacon gummy candies are good though.