Newton to Kelvin (°N → K)

276.18

1.0000 °N = 276.18 K

Formula

°N → kelvin → K
KelvinNewton (Swap Units)

Conversion Table

°NK
0273.15
1.0000276.18
2.0000279.21
3.0000282.24
4.0000285.27
5.0000288.30
6.0000291.33
7.0000294.36
8.0000297.39
9.0000300.42
10.000303.45
11.000306.48
12.000309.51
13.000312.54
14.000315.57
15.000318.60
16.000321.63
17.000324.67
18.000327.70
19.000330.73
°NK
20.000333.76
21.000336.79
22.000339.82
23.000342.85
24.000345.88
25.000348.91
26.000351.94
27.000354.97
28.000358.00
29.000361.03
30.000364.06
31.000367.09
32.000370.12
33.000373.15
34.000376.18
35.000379.21
36.000382.24
37.000385.27
38.000388.30
39.000391.33
°NK
40.000394.36
41.000397.39
42.000400.42
43.000403.45
44.000406.48
45.000409.51
46.000412.54
47.000415.57
48.000418.60
49.000421.63
50.000424.67
51.000427.70
52.000430.73
53.000433.76
54.000436.79
55.000439.82
56.000442.85
57.000445.88
58.000448.91
59.000451.94
°NK
60.000454.97
61.000458.00
62.000461.03
63.000464.06
64.000467.09
65.000470.12
66.000473.15
67.000476.18
68.000479.21
69.000482.24
70.000485.27
71.000488.30
72.000491.33
73.000494.36
74.000497.39
75.000500.42
76.000503.45
77.000506.48
78.000509.51
79.000512.54

Newton to Kelvin Conversion

Converting Newton (°N) to Kelvin (K) is a common temperature conversion. 1 °N equals 276.180303 K. For example, 100 °N is equal to 576.180303 K.

Quick Mental Math: Newton to Kelvin

Multiply by 3.03 to convert newton to kelvin.

Why is converting Newton to Kelvin tricky?

Kelvin has a different zero point (273.15), so you can't just multiply or divide.

Reference Temperatures

Absolute zero: -90.1395 °N = 0 K. Water freezing point: 0 °N = 273.15 K. Room temperature: 6.6 °N = 293.15 K. Body temperature: 12.21 °N = 310.15 K. Water boiling point: 33 °N = 373.15 K.

What is Newton?

Newton (°N) is a unit of temperature. The newton (N) is the SI unit of force, defined as the force required to accelerate a 1-kilogram mass by 1 meter per second squared. It equals 1 kg·m/s² and is standardized by the International System of Units for measurements of force in physics and engineering [bipm-si-brochure]. Named after Sir Isaac Newton in 1946, the newton was formally adopted by the CGPM as the SI unit of force to honor Newton's second law of motion. It replaced older, inconsistent force units to unify scientific measurements [cgpm-resolutions]. The newton is used worldwide in scientific research, engineering, and industry to quantify force. Countries and international standards bodies rely on the newton for mechanical calculations, material testing, and design [bipm-si-brochure].

What is Kelvin?

Kelvin (K) is a unit of temperature. Kelvin is the SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature defined by fixing the numerical value of the Boltzmann constant to 1.380649×10⁻²³ J·K⁻¹. It uses absolute zero as its null point and increments equal to those of the Celsius scale. One kelvin equals one degree Celsius in magnitude but starts at absolute zero, representing the lowest physically possible temperature [bipm-si-brochure]. The kelvin scale was named after William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin, who proposed an absolute thermodynamic temperature scale in 1848. It was formally adopted as an SI base unit in 1967–1968 by the CGPM to provide a universal temperature standard based on fundamental constants [cgpm-resolutions]. Kelvin is the standard temperature unit in scientific research, thermodynamics, and engineering worldwide. It is the official unit for temperature in physics and chemistry according to the International System of Units (SI), used globally including by NIST and BIPM member countries [nist-si-guide].

Common Misspellings

People often search for this conversion using these alternate spellings: newton force, newtonn, newtton, newtons, kelvin degree, kelvins, kelvins unit, kelvian, kelvins scale. All of these refer to the Newton to Kelvin conversion.

Common Conversions