Réaumur to Newton (°Ré → °N)

0.41250

1.0000 °Ré = 0.41250 °N

Formula

°Ré → kelvin → °N
NewtonRéaumur (Swap Units)

Conversion Table

°Ré°N
00
1.00000.41250
2.00000.82500
3.00001.2375
4.00001.6500
5.00002.0625
6.00002.4750
7.00002.8875
8.00003.3000
9.00003.7125
10.0004.1250
11.0004.5375
12.0004.9500
13.0005.3625
14.0005.7750
15.0006.1875
16.0006.6000
17.0007.0125
18.0007.4250
19.0007.8375
°Ré°N
20.0008.2500
21.0008.6625
22.0009.0750
23.0009.4875
24.0009.9000
25.00010.313
26.00010.725
27.00011.138
28.00011.550
29.00011.963
30.00012.375
31.00012.788
32.00013.200
33.00013.613
34.00014.025
35.00014.438
36.00014.850
37.00015.263
38.00015.675
39.00016.088
°Ré°N
40.00016.500
41.00016.913
42.00017.325
43.00017.738
44.00018.150
45.00018.563
46.00018.975
47.00019.387
48.00019.800
49.00020.213
50.00020.625
51.00021.038
52.00021.450
53.00021.863
54.00022.275
55.00022.688
56.00023.100
57.00023.513
58.00023.925
59.00024.338
°Ré°N
60.00024.750
61.00025.163
62.00025.575
63.00025.988
64.00026.400
65.00026.813
66.00027.225
67.00027.638
68.00028.050
69.00028.463
70.00028.875
71.00029.288
72.00029.700
73.00030.113
74.00030.525
75.00030.938
76.00031.350
77.00031.763
78.00032.175
79.00032.587

Réaumur to Newton Conversion

Converting Réaumur (°Ré) to Newton (°N) is a common temperature conversion. 1 °Ré equals 0.4125 °N. For example, 100 °Ré is equal to 41.25 °N.

Quick Mental Math: Réaumur to Newton

Divide by 2.42 to convert reaumur to newton.

Why is converting Réaumur to Newton tricky?

The conversion factor requires careful attention to avoid reversing the operation.

Reference Temperatures

Absolute zero: -218.52 °Ré = -90.1395 °N. Water freezing point: 0 °Ré = 0 °N. Room temperature: 16 °Ré = 6.6 °N. Body temperature: 29.6 °Ré = 12.21 °N. Water boiling point: 80 °Ré = 33 °N.

What is Réaumur?

Réaumur (°Ré) is a unit of temperature. The Réaumur scale is a temperature scale where water freezes at 0 °Ré and boils at 80 °Ré at standard atmospheric pressure. Each degree Réaumur corresponds to 1.25 degrees Celsius. The scale was historically used in Europe but is now mostly obsolete and replaced by Celsius and Kelvin [cgpm-resolutions]. René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur introduced the scale in 1730 to simplify temperature measurement using alcohol thermometers. It was widely used in France and parts of Europe until the 19th century before being supplanted by the Celsius scale [cgpm-resolutions]. Today, the Réaumur scale has limited use and appears mainly in historical or academic contexts. Some traditional cheese-making regions in Europe may still reference it. Modern science and industry prefer Celsius or Kelvin in line with SI standards [cgpm-resolutions].

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].

Common Misspellings

People often search for this conversion using these alternate spellings: reaumer, reaumur, reaumur scale, réamer, newton force, newtonn, newtton, newtons. All of these refer to the Réaumur to Newton conversion.

Common Conversions