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Rankine

Rankine is a temperature scale that, like kelvin, sets zero at absolute zero, but uses Fahrenheit degrees. It is named after Scottish engineer and physicist William John Macquorn Rankine, who proposed it in 1859. See Rankine-Hugoniot equation.

A difference of 1 degree R. is equal to a difference of 1 degree F, but absolute zero is 0 degrees R, or -459.67 degrees F. Thus:

  • To convert from Fahrenheit to Rankine, add 459.67.
  • To convert from Rankine to Fahrenheit, subtract 459.67.
  • To convert from kelvin to Rankine, multiply by 1.8.
  • To convert from Rankine to kelvin, divide by 1.8.

Other temperature scales include Fahrenheit (1724), Réaumur (1730), Celsius (1742), and kelvin (1862). (Note that "kelvin" is lower-cased because it is an SI unit, even though it is named after a person).

Referenced By

Absolute scale of temperature | Absolute temperature | Absolute zero | Celcius | Celsius | Centigrade | Conversion factor | Conversion of units | Degree | Degree Celsius | Degree centigrade | Degree sign | Degrees Celsius | Degrees Fahrenheit | Fahrenheit | Fahrenheit (degree) | Fahrenheit degree | Fahrenheit scale of temperature | Farenheit scale of temperature | Fl. oz. | List of standards topics | Scientific units named after people | Temperature | Temperture | U.S. customary unit | U.S. customary units | US customary units | William John Macquorn Rankine | Zero temperature

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rankine".

 

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