From a contribution from reader and professor of physics at Lakehead University, Canada, William Sears in this week's commentary
Perhaps this has been a forwards conversion from 37 Celsius to 98.6 Fahrenheit and then backwards again from 98.6 Fahrenheit to 36.8 Celsius.
Nevertheless, I have been quoting normal body temperature as 36.8 Celsius or 98.6 Fahrenheit for as long as I can remember.
Have I really been wrong all this time, or should I treat the words of even a professor of physics with a degree of scepticism,
regards,
BillyJoe
I have always taken normal body temperature in Celcius to be 36.8.I must respond to your "normal" body temperature comment. It is useful to know the history of the 98.6 F value, since it is not what it seems. The original measurement of normal body temperature was done by averaging a number of tests on a group of people. The result was then "rounded off" to 37 Celsius, given the variation seen. Translated to Fahrenheit, exactly 37 C is exactly 98.6 F, a spurious increase in accuracy. It would be better to round this off to 99 F
Perhaps this has been a forwards conversion from 37 Celsius to 98.6 Fahrenheit and then backwards again from 98.6 Fahrenheit to 36.8 Celsius.
Nevertheless, I have been quoting normal body temperature as 36.8 Celsius or 98.6 Fahrenheit for as long as I can remember.
Have I really been wrong all this time, or should I treat the words of even a professor of physics with a degree of scepticism,
regards,
BillyJoe