EXACT.RESULT
10 Rankines to Celsius
10 r converted to c. Full working, formula and reference table below.
- Category
- temperature
- Input
- 10 r
- Output
- -267.594444
Rankine
Celsius
OTHER AMOUNTS
r → cRankine to Celsius Conversion Table
Common rankine to celsius values for quick reference.
| Rankine | Celsius |
|---|---|
| 1 | -272.594444 |
| 2 | -272.038889 |
| 5 | -270.372222 |
| 10 | -267.594444 |
| 25 | -259.261111 |
| 50 | -245.372222 |
| 100 | -217.594444 |
| 250 | -134.261111 |
| 500 | 4.627778 |
| 1000 | 282.405556 |
When you'd actually use this
Where you'd actually use rankine → celsius in everyday Australian life.
Cooking from overseas recipes
American and British cookbooks rarely use the same temperature units as Australian ones.
Online shopping
Product specs from US stores often list temperature in imperial units.
Travel and fitness apps
Apps that default to a different region may show temperature you need to translate.
Conversion Formula
Convert Rankine to Celsius using the appropriate temperature formula.
Formula
Convert r to cInverse (converting back)
Convert c to rHow to Convert Rankine to Celsius
Convert rankine to celsius in three steps. The relationship is a single scale shift, so once you know the factor you can do it in your head for round numbers.
Start with your value
Take the number of rankine you want to convert.
Apply the formula
Use the Rankine → Celsius formula shown above to shift the value.
Read your answer
The result is the equivalent in celsius.
Worked example
10 rankine = -267.594444 celsius
Plugging 10 Rankine into the formula gives -267.594444 Celsius.
What is a Rankine?
Degrees Rankine is an absolute scale using Fahrenheit-sized degrees, with 0 °R at absolute zero (−459.67 °F).
Origin
Proposed by Scottish engineer William Rankine in 1859.
Notable uses
- US engineering thermodynamics
- Aerospace calculations
What is a Celsius?
Degrees Celsius is the everyday temperature scale in Australia, with water freezing at 0 °C and boiling at 100 °C at sea level.
Origin
Devised by Anders Celsius in 1742; redefined in 1948 as part of the SI.
Notable uses
- Weather forecasts
- Oven temperatures
- Body temperature