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| Question 917000:  Bens grandfather was listening to the weather report which indicated that the maximum for the day was going to be 30C. He wants to know what the temperature is in F
 Using c/5 = (f-32)/2
 Someone had helped & had gotten
 9/5(30)+32
 54+32
 f = 86
 I just don't get how we get the 9/5
 Help please?
 Answer by MathLover1(20850)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! There are two main temperature scales: °F, the Fahrenheit Scale (used in the US), and
 °C, the Celsius Scale (part of the Metric System, used in most other countries)
 They both measure the same thing (temperature!), but use different numbers:
 
 Boiling water (at normal pressure) measures
  ° in Celsius, but  ° in Fahrenheit And as water freezes it measures
  ° in Celsius, but  ° in Fahrenheit. 
 The scales start at a different number (
  vs  ), so we will need to add or subtract  . The scales rise at a different rate (
  vs  ), so we will also need to multiply. And so, to convert:
 from Celsius to Fahrenheit: first multiply by
  , then add   
 from Fahrenheit to Celsius: first subtract
  , then multiply by   
 But
  can be simplified to  , and
  can be simplified to  , so this is the easiest way: 
 °C to °F multiply by
  , then divide by  , then add   °F to °C deduct
  , then multiply by  , then divide by   
 We can write each as a formula like this:
 
 Celsius to Fahrenheit:
  Fahrenheit to Celsius:
   so, you got
 
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
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