Fahrenheit to Newton Converter
Convert Fahrenheit (°F) to Newton (°N)
Temperature Converter
v0.1.7-5.6833°N
1 Fahrenheit = -5.6833333333 Newton
Conversion Formula
32 °F = 0 °N
0 °N = 32 °F
How to Convert Fahrenheit to Newton
To convert Fahrenheit to Newton, use the formula: °N = (°F − 32) × 11/60
Newton = Fahrenheit × 1
Examples: 32 °F = 0 °N (freezing point), 212 °F = 33 °N (boiling point)
Fahrenheit to Newton Conversion Table
| Fahrenheit (°F) | Newton (°N) |
|---|---|
| -40 °F | -13.2 °N |
| -20 °F | -9.5333 °N |
| -10 °F | -7.7 °N |
| 0 °F | -5.8667 °N |
| 10 °F | -4.0333 °N |
| 20 °F | -2.2 °N |
| 25 °F | -1.2833 °N |
| 30 °F | -0.3667 °N |
| 37 °F | 0.9167 °N |
| 40 °F | 1.4667 °N |
| 50 °F | 3.3 °N |
| 100 °F | 12.4667 °N |
| 200 °F | 30.8 °N |
| 500 °F | 85.8 °N |
| 1000 °F | 177.4667 °N |
About These Scales
°FFahrenheit
Fahrenheit is a temperature scale primarily used in the United States. On this scale, water freezes at 32F and boils at 212F. It was proposed by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in 1724.
°NNewton
The Newton scale was devised by Isaac Newton around 1700. On this scale, water freezes at 0N and boils at 33N. It was one of the first attempts to create a standardized temperature scale.