Temperature · Unit Converter

Convert Fahrenheit to Triple Point of Water

Convert degrees fahrenheit to triple points of water instantly. TPW = (°F + 459.67) × 0.002033810058 — use the live calculator, the exact formula, a reference-temperature table and worked examples. Also check the Triple Point of Water to Fahrenheit converter for the reverse conversion.

Written by Sunith Babu L, Ph.D., Lead Engineer Reviewed by Girish V Kulkarni Ph.D.
Temperature category 2 min read Published Last reviewed Updated

Units explained

Modern Standard Scales

Fahrenheit

What is a degree fahrenheit?

The degree Fahrenheit (°F) sets the freezing point of water at 32 °F and the boiling point at 212 °F, dividing the interval into 180 equal degrees. One degree Fahrenheit is exactly 5/9 the size of a kelvin, and °F = °C × 9/5 + 32 exactly.

Origin of the degree fahrenheit

Created by German-born physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, inventor of the reliable mercury-in-glass thermometer. His zero point was the temperature of an ice-and-salt brine mixture, and his original upper fixed point sat near human body temperature.

Where it is used

The official everyday scale of the United States and a handful of other countries. In India, clinical thermometers and fever readings are still very commonly quoted in Fahrenheit (a '102-degree fever'), which keeps °F to °C conversion a daily need.

When and where it was developed

Introduced by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in 1724 in Amsterdam, building directly on Ole Rømer's earlier scale, which Fahrenheit had studied during a 1708 visit to Copenhagen.

Scientific & Fixed-Point

Triple Point of Water

What is the triple point of water?

The triple point of water is the unique state at which ice, liquid water, and water vapor coexist in equilibrium — exactly 273.16 K (0.01 °C). Treated as a converter unit, 1 triple point of water equals exactly 273.16 kelvins.

Origin of the triple point of water

Adopted as thermometry's master fixed point because it is exactly reproducible in a sealed glass cell, unlike freezing and boiling points, which shift with atmospheric pressure and dissolved impurities.

Where it is used

Calibration laboratories and the International Temperature Scale of 1990 (ITS-90); from 1954 to 2019 the kelvin itself was defined as exactly 1/273.16 of this temperature.

When and where it was developed

Fixed at exactly 273.16 K by the 10th CGPM in 1954; it remained the kelvin's defining point until the 2019 SI redefinition through the Boltzmann constant.

Fahrenheit to Triple Point of Water conversion formula

The exact relationship between degrees fahrenheit and triple points of water:

TPW = (°F + 459.67) × 0.002033810058
°F = (TPW × 491.688) − 459.67

To convert degrees fahrenheit to triple points of water, add 459.67 to the value, then multiply by 0.002033810058. To reverse, multiply the value by 491.688, then subtract 459.67.

Reference anchors: water freezes at 32 °F = 0.9999633914 TPW and boils at 212 °F = 1.3660492019 TPW (at standard atmospheric pressure).

How to use this converter

Type a value into the calculator. The result in triple points of water updates as you type. Tap a quick value, copy the result with one click, or use the swap arrow to jump straight to the Triple Point of Water to Fahrenheit converter for the reverse direction.

Step-by-step: convert degrees fahrenheit to triple points of water

  1. Write down the temperature in degrees fahrenheit (°F).
  2. Add 459.67 to the value, then multiply by 0.002033810058.
  3. The result is the same temperature expressed in triple points of water (TPW).
  4. To reverse, multiply the value by 491.688, then subtract 459.67 — or open the Triple Point of Water to Fahrenheit converter.

Worked examples

Example 1 — Convert 98.6 °F to TPW (human body temperature):
(98.6 + 459.67) × 0.002033810058 = 1.1354151413 TPW

Example 2 — Convert 212 °F to TPW (the boiling point of water):
(212 + 459.67) × 0.002033810058 = 1.3660492019 TPW

Fahrenheit to Triple Point of Water conversion table

Physically meaningful reference temperatures, from absolute zero to the surface of the Sun, converted from degrees fahrenheit to triple points of water:

Fahrenheit [°F]Triple Point of Water [TPW]Reference point
-459.670Absolute zero
-400.8535290672Where Celsius and Fahrenheit coincide (−40°)
00.9348814695Zero Fahrenheit (0 °F)
320.9999633914Water freezes (0 °C / 32 °F)
32.0181Triple point of water
501.0365719725Cool day (10 °C / 50 °F)
681.0731805535Room temperature (20 °C / 68 °F)
771.091484844Standard laboratory temperature (25 °C)
861.1097891346Hot day (30 °C / 86 °F)
98.61.1354151413Human body temperature (37 °C / 98.6 °F)
1041.1463977156Heat-wave day (40 °C / 104 °F)
1221.1830062967Hot tap water (50 °C / 122 °F)
2121.3660492019Water boils (100 °C / 212 °F)
3561.6589178503Moderate baking oven (180 °C / 356 °F)
9940.7321.1524381315Surface of the Sun (≈5,505 °C)

Frequently asked questions

What is 98.6 °F in TPW?
98.6 °F equals 1.1354151413 TPW — normal human body temperature.
How do I convert degrees fahrenheit to triple points of water?
Use the formula TPW = (°F + 459.67) × 0.002033810058: add 459.67 to the value, then multiply by 0.002033810058.
How do I convert triple points of water back to degrees fahrenheit?
Apply the reverse formula °F = (TPW × 491.688) − 459.67 — multiply the value by 491.688, then subtract 459.67 — or use the Triple Point of Water to Fahrenheit converter.
At what temperature do the Fahrenheit and Triple Point of Water scales read the same number?
Both scales show the same number at 0.9367867158: 0.9367867158 °F = 0.9367867158 TPW. Set TPW = °F in the conversion formula and solve to verify it.
Can a temperature be below absolute zero?
No. Absolute zero (0 K = −273.15 °C = −459.67 °F) is the floor of the thermodynamic temperature scale. The calculator flags any input that would fall below it.

Convert Fahrenheit to other temperature units

Show all Fahrenheit conversions

Sources & references

Conversion relationship (TPW = (°F + 459.67) × 0.002033810058) verified against the following authoritative sources:

Results are provided for general reference. Verify critical measurements against an authoritative standard.