Community Tip - Did you get called away in the middle of writing a post? Don't worry you can find your unfinished post later in the Drafts section of your profile page. X
Hello,
I found a wired behaviour using units in calculations. The result is slightly different if units are used in formula or not. See attached file. Both results must be identical, but they are not. I can even do the calculation in my head and the one with unit is false.
Cheers DPJB
Solved! Go to Solution.
Not a bug.Temperature units are weird.
Realize that 0 °C = 273.15 K.
So without units you are multiplying with 0^3=0 in the last term when t=0.
But when t=0 °C, you are multiplying with (273.15 K)^3.
You should define your constants A, B and C with K, or Delta°C, but not with °C. And you should adapt your formula to include a reference temperature, is that 0 °C ?
Success!
Luc
Not a bug.Temperature units are weird.
Realize that 0 °C = 273.15 K.
So without units you are multiplying with 0^3=0 in the last term when t=0.
But when t=0 °C, you are multiplying with (273.15 K)^3.
You should define your constants A, B and C with K, or Delta°C, but not with °C. And you should adapt your formula to include a reference temperature, is that 0 °C ?
Success!
Luc
Thanks for your reply. Makes sense now, not quite intuitive.
The "units" for temperature can be quite confusing.
Keep in mind, that behind the scenes Prime only uses the base unit Kelvin!
°C is not a unit you can cancel because its not just a multiplication factor.
I wish everyone to have a body temperature 615 cpm and not get sick!