Convert Fahrenheit to Newton

Convert Fahrenheit (°F) to Newton (°N) instantly and accurately.

Fahrenheit (°F)
Newton (°N)

Conversion Formula

°N = (°F − 32) × 11/60

About Fahrenheit

Fahrenheit (°F) was developed by German physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in 1724 and remains the primary temperature scale in the United States, Belize, and the Cayman Islands. Water freezes at 32°F and boils at 212°F at standard atmospheric pressure. For Americans, common references include: room temperature (68-72°F), body temperature (98.6°F), and a hot summer day (90-100°F). The scale was originally based on the lowest temperature Fahrenheit could create with ice and salt (-17.8°C or 0°F).

About Newton

Newton (°N) was devised by Isaac Newton around 1700 and published anonymously in 1701. The scale places water's freezing point at 0°N and boiling point at 33°N - a choice that allowed body temperature to fall at approximately 12°N. Newton used linseed oil as the thermometric fluid and described his scale in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Although never widely adopted, it is historically significant as one of the earliest systematic temperature scales and directly inspired Ole Rømer, who visited Newton, and later Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, who built upon Rømer's work.

Quick Reference Table

Fahrenheit (°F)Newton (°N)
-40 °F-13.2 °N
32 °F0 °N
68 °F6.6 °N
98.6 °F12.21 °N
212 °F33 °N
392 °F66 °N

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