Kelvin to Delisle Converter

Convert kelvin to delisle instantly with our free temperature conversion calculator. Uses the exact conversion formula for accurate results.

K
=
°De
109.725
Delisle (°De)
300 K = 109.725 °De
🔄 Swap Units (Delisle → Kelvin)
0 K
=
559.725 °De
559.725 °De = 0 K

How to Convert Kelvin to Delisle

To convert a temperature from kelvin to delisle, use the following formula:

°De = (373.15 − K) × 3/2

This formula accounts for both the different degree sizes and the different zero points of the Kelvin and Delisle temperature scales.

Example: Convert 373.15 K to delisle.

Using the formula: °De = (373.15 − K) × 3/2

Substituting 373.15 K: result = 0 °De

Therefore, 373.15 K equals 0 °De.

What Is Kelvin?

The kelvin (symbol: K) is the SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature, named after the Irish-Scottish physicist Lord Kelvin (William Thomson). Unlike Celsius and Fahrenheit, the kelvin is an absolute temperature scale — its zero point (0 K) is absolute zero, the lowest possible temperature where all molecular motion ceases. The kelvin has the same magnitude as the Celsius degree, meaning a temperature difference of 1 K equals a temperature difference of 1 °C. The scales differ only by their zero points: 0 K = −273.15 °C, so K = °C + 273.15. The kelvin is the standard unit for temperature in physics, chemistry, engineering, and all other sciences. Thermodynamic equations, gas laws (such as the ideal gas law PV = nRT), and blackbody radiation formulas all require temperatures in kelvins. Important reference temperatures in kelvins: absolute zero is 0 K, liquid nitrogen boils at 77 K, water freezes at 273.15 K, water boils at 373.15 K, and the surface temperature of the Sun is approximately 5,778 K. The cosmic microwave background radiation corresponds to about 2.725 K. Note that the kelvin is written without the degree symbol (°): the correct notation is “300 K” (not “300 °K”).

Key kelvin equivalences:

  • 0 K = −273.15 °C = −459.67 °F (absolute zero)
  • 273.15 K = 0 °C = 32 °F (water freezing)
  • 373.15 K = 100 °C = 212 °F (water boiling)
  • 310.15 K = 37 °C = 98.6 °F (body temperature)
  • 293.15 K = 20 °C = 68 °F (room temperature)
  • 1 K change = 1 °C change = 1.8 °F change

What Is Delisle?

The Delisle scale (symbol: °De) is a temperature scale invented in 1732 by the French astronomer Joseph-Nicolas Delisle. It is notable for being an inverted scale — higher Delisle values correspond to colder temperatures, the opposite of most other temperature scales. On the Delisle scale, the boiling point of water is defined as 0 °De, and the freezing point of water is 150 °De. This means that as temperature increases, the Delisle value decreases, and vice versa. The conversion between Celsius and Delisle is: °De = (100 − °C) × 3/2. So 100 °C (boiling water) = 0 °De, 0 °C (freezing water) = 150 °De, and −100 °C = 300 °De. The Delisle scale was used in Russia for about a century, particularly at the St Petersburg observatory. The Russian polymath Mikhail Lomonosov used a modified version of the Delisle scale in his scientific work. It was eventually replaced by the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales. Today, the Delisle scale is primarily of historical interest and is encountered in the history of science and in temperature conversion exercises. It serves as an interesting example of an inverted temperature scale.

Key delisle equivalences:

  • 0 °De = 100 °C = 212 °F (boiling point of water)
  • 150 °De = 0 °C = 32 °F (freezing point of water)
  • 94.5 °De = 37 °C = 98.6 °F (body temperature)
  • 176.67 °De = −17.78 °C = 0 °F
  • 559.73 °De = −273.15 °C = 0 K (absolute zero)

Understanding Temperature Scales

Temperature is a fundamental physical quantity that measures the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance. Different temperature scales were developed at different times in history, each with its own reference points and degree sizes.

Unlike most other unit conversions (length, mass, etc.) which involve simple multiplication, temperature conversions require both multiplication/division AND addition/subtraction because temperature scales have different zero points.

The Six Temperature Scales

  • Celsius (°C): Defined by the freezing (0 °C) and boiling (100 °C) points of water. The most widely used scale worldwide for everyday and scientific purposes.
  • Fahrenheit (°F): Defined with water freezing at 32 °F and boiling at 212 °F (180 degrees apart). Primarily used in the United States.
  • Kelvin (K): The SI absolute temperature scale. Zero kelvin (0 K = −273.15 °C) is absolute zero. Uses Celsius-sized degrees. Standard in science.
  • Rankine (°R): An absolute temperature scale using Fahrenheit-sized degrees. 0 °R = 0 K = −459.67 °F. Used in some US engineering applications.
  • Delisle (°De): A historical inverted scale where higher values mean colder temperatures. Water boils at 0 °De and freezes at 150 °De. Invented by Joseph-Nicolas Delisle in 1732.
  • Newton (°N): A historical scale devised by Isaac Newton around 1701. Water freezes at 0 °N and boils at 33 °N. Proportional to Celsius (°N = °C × 33/100).

Key Reference Temperatures

  • Absolute zero: 0 K = −273.15 °C = −459.67 °F = 0 °R. The lowest possible temperature.
  • Water freezing: 273.15 K = 0 °C = 32 °F = 491.67 °R = 150 °De = 0 °N
  • Human body: 310.15 K = 37 °C = 98.6 °F = 558.27 °R = 94.5 °De = 12.21 °N
  • Water boiling: 373.15 K = 100 °C = 212 °F = 671.67 °R = 0 °De = 33 °N
  • Scales intersect: −40 °C = −40 °F (the only point where Celsius and Fahrenheit are equal)

Why Temperature Conversion Is Different

Most unit conversions (metres to feet, grams to ounces) involve multiplying by a single conversion factor. Temperature is different because the scales have different zero points. Converting between Celsius and Fahrenheit, for example, requires both multiplication (to account for different degree sizes: 180 °F vs 100 °C) and addition (to account for the offset: 32 °F = 0 °C).

The exceptions are the purely proportional pairs: Celsius–Newton (°N = °C × 33/100) and Kelvin–Rankine (°R = K × 9/5), where the zero points are the same (0 °C = 0 °N, 0 K = 0 °R).

Tips for Temperature Conversions

  • The quick Celsius ↔ Fahrenheit estimate: double the Celsius value and add 30. For example, 20 °C ≈ 2 × 20 + 30 = 70 °F (actual: 68 °F). Good enough for everyday use.
  • Remember the key points: 0 °C = 32 °F (freezing), 100 °C = 212 °F (boiling), 37 °C = 98.6 °F (body temp), −40 °C = −40 °F.
  • For Celsius to Kelvin, simply add 273.15. For Fahrenheit to Rankine, add 459.67. These are the easiest temperature conversions.
  • Kelvin and Rankine are “absolute” scales starting at absolute zero. They cannot have negative values for physically meaningful temperatures.
  • The Delisle scale runs backwards: higher numbers mean colder. 0 °De is hot (boiling water), 150 °De is cold (freezing water).
  • The Newton temperature scale (°N) should not be confused with the newton (N), which is the SI unit of force. Context makes the distinction clear.
  • Temperature differences convert differently from absolute temperatures. A change of 1 °C = 1 K = 1.8 °F = 1.8 °R. But an absolute temperature of 1 °C ≠ 1.8 °F.
  • In scientific contexts, always use kelvin for thermodynamic calculations (gas laws, radiation, entropy). Celsius is acceptable for temperature differences and everyday science.

Kelvin to Delisle Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from kelvin to delisle.

Kelvin (K)Delisle (°De)
0 K559.725 °De
50 K484.725 °De
100 K409.725 °De
150 K334.725 °De
200 K259.725 °De
233 K210.225 °De
250 K184.725 °De
273.15 K150 °De
293 K120.225 °De
300 K109.725 °De
310 K94.725 °De
350 K34.725 °De
373.15 K0 °De
400 K-40.275 °De
500 K-190.275 °De
600 K-340.275 °De
700 K-490.275 °De
800 K-640.275 °De
900 K-790.275 °De
1,000 K-940.275 °De

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