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Delisle to Kelvin (°De to K) Converter

1 °De = 372.4833 K

1 Delisle equals 372.4833 Kelvin (1 °De = 372.4833 K). Convert Delisle to Kelvin with formula, table, and examples.

To convert Delisle to Kelvin, use the formula: K = 373.15 - De x 2/3. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero (0 K = -273.15 degrees C), while the Delisle scale starts at the boiling point of water (0 De = 373.15 K). Both scales were created for scientific purposes, but from opposite philosophical starting points - Kelvin from the coldest possible temperature, Delisle from one of the hottest commonly encountered ones.

How to Convert Delisle to Kelvin

°De via Kelvin to K
Formula: Delisle to Kelvin
  1. Convert to Kelvin: K = 373.15 - °De * 2 / 3
  2. Convert to Kelvin: K = K
  3. Read the result in Kelvin

Common Delisle to Kelvin Conversions

Delisle (°De) Kelvin (K) Status
0 °De 373.15 K
50 °De 339.82 K
100 °De 306.48 K
150 °De 273.15 K
200 °De 239.82 K
250 °De 206.48 K
300 °De 173.15 K
350 °De 139.82 K
400 °De 106.48 K
500 °De 39.82 K
559 °De 0.48 K

Good to Know About Delisle to Kelvin Conversion

The Delisle and Kelvin scales represent two fundamentally different approaches to temperature measurement. Delisle started from a practical reference point (boiling water) and measured downward. Kelvin started from a theoretical absolute (the complete absence of thermal energy) and measured upward. The transition from empirical to absolute temperature scales mirrors the broader evolution of science from observation to theory.

Delisle to Kelvin: What You Need to Know

At 150 Delisle (the freezing point of water), the Kelvin equivalent is 273.15 K. At 0 Delisle (boiling water), it is 373.15 K. Absolute zero in Delisle is 559.725 De - a number so far from the scale's practical range that Delisle never imagined temperatures that cold. The conversion connects an 18th-century empirical scale to a 19th-century thermodynamic absolute.

What is a Delisle? °De

A historical inverted temperature scale invented by Joseph-Nicolas Delisle in 1732. Water boils at 0 °De and freezes at 150 °De. Higher numbers mean colder temperatures.

Historical historical Russian meteorology
Learn more about Delisle →

What is a Kelvin? K

The SI base unit of temperature. 0 K is absolute zero, the theoretical lowest possible temperature. Used in science and engineering.

Metric physics chemistry engineering
Learn more about Kelvin →

Going the other way? Use our Kelvin to Delisle converter.

Delisle to Kelvin FAQ

  • Subtract the Delisle value times 2/3 from 373.15. For example, 150 Delisle: 373.15 - (150 x 0.6667) = 373.15 - 100 = 273.15 Kelvin (the freezing point of water).

  • Absolute zero (0 Kelvin, -273.15 degrees Celsius) equals 559.725 degrees Delisle. This extremely high Delisle number reflects the scale's inverted nature - colder temperatures produce larger numbers.

  • No. The Delisle scale fell out of use in Russia by the mid-1800s, while the Kelvin scale was formalized by Lord Kelvin in 1848. They never coexisted as active scientific standards.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Delisle to Kelvin

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • It is certainly unintuitive. While 0 Kelvin and -273.15 Celsius both communicate 'the coldest possible temperature' clearly, 559.725 Delisle sounds like an extraordinarily hot oven setting. The inverted Delisle scale makes the universe's coldest temperature look like its hottest - a philosophical confusion that no other temperature scale produces.

  • Never. Kelvin's absolute zero starting point makes thermodynamic calculations natural: energy is proportional to temperature, entropy calculations are straightforward, and gas laws use simple ratios. In Delisle, every thermodynamic equation would need awkward inversions. Kelvin was designed for physics; Delisle was designed for one man's mercury thermometer.

  • The physics would be identical - nature does not care which scale humans use. But the equations would be messier, the intuition harder, and every physics student would need to remember that higher numbers mean lower energy. Kelvin's genius was aligning the mathematics with physical reality. Delisle's scale aligned with nothing except mercury expansion in a glass tube.

Need the reverse? Use our Kelvin to Delisle converter. See all Temperature converters.