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Kelvin to Rankine Converter 2026 | Free Temperature Conversion Tool
Temperature Conversion 2026

Kelvin to Rankine Converter

Accurate temperature conversion between kelvin and rankine — absolute scale units made simple

Convert kelvin to rankine (°R) instantly with exact calculations. Includes bidirectional conversion and full temperature breakdowns for science, engineering, and thermodynamics in 2026.

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🌡️ Kelvin to Rankine Temperature Converter

Professional temperature conversion for thermodynamics, engineering, and scientific calculations

✔ Precise Conversions

Convert kelvin to rankine using the exact scientific relationship: 1 kelvin equals exactly 1.8 rankine (°R). Both are absolute temperature scales beginning at absolute zero, making this one of the cleanest unit conversions in thermometry — simply multiply kelvin by 1.8 to get rankine.

✔ Bidirectional Tool

Switch seamlessly between kelvin to rankine and rankine to kelvin conversion modes. Get instant results with additional temperature breakdowns in Celsius (°C) and Fahrenheit (°F) — all from a single input value with no extra steps required.

✔ Practical Applications

Essential for thermodynamics coursework, aerospace engineering, cryogenics, chemical engineering, and any field working across SI (kelvin) and imperial (rankine) unit systems. Particularly useful when reading US engineering literature alongside international scientific standards.

🌡️ Convert Kelvin to Rankine

Select conversion direction and enter your temperature value below

Enter the temperature in kelvin to convert to rankine (minimum 0 K = absolute zero)
Enter the temperature in rankine to convert to kelvin (minimum 0 °R = absolute zero)
Rankine (°R)
0
Equivalent temperature value

Complete Temperature Breakdown

Kelvin (K)
0
Rankine (°R)
0
Celsius (°C)
0
Fahrenheit (°F)
0

Detailed Breakdown

Understanding Kelvin to Rankine Conversion

The kelvin (K) and the rankine (°R) are both absolute temperature scales — meaning they both start at absolute zero, the theoretical lowest possible temperature in the universe. Unlike Celsius and Fahrenheit, neither kelvin nor rankine uses negative values in normal thermodynamic work, because 0 K and 0 °R both represent the same physical point: absolute zero (−273.15°C / −459.67°F).

The key difference between the two scales is their degree size. The kelvin degree is the same size as the Celsius degree, while the rankine degree is the same size as the Fahrenheit degree. Since the Fahrenheit degree is exactly 1.8 times smaller than the Celsius degree, it follows that 1 K = 1.8 °R exactly. This simple multiplication factor makes kelvin-to-rankine one of the most straightforward temperature conversions, widely used in thermodynamics and fluid mechanics engineering.

📐 Kelvin to Rankine Formula

°R = K × 1.8
°R = K × (9 ÷ 5)
Example: 300 K × 1.8 = 540 °R

📐 Rankine to Kelvin Formula

K = °R ÷ 1.8
K = °R × (5 ÷ 9)
Example: 671.67 °R ÷ 1.8 = 373.15 K

🌡️ Absolute Temperature Scale — Kelvin vs Rankine

0 K Absolute Zero (Kelvin)
0 °R Absolute Zero (Rankine)
−273.15°C −459.67 °F

1 K = 1.8 °R  |  1 °R = 0.5556 K  |  Both scales start at absolute zero

Kelvin to Rankine Conversion Table 2026

Use this reference table to quickly look up common kelvin-to-rankine conversions including key thermodynamic reference points. All values use the exact factor of 1 K = 1.8 °R.

Kelvin (K) Rankine (°R) Celsius (°C) Fahrenheit (°F)
0 K0 °R−273.15 °C−459.67 °F
100 K180 °R−173.15 °C−279.67 °F
200 K360 °R−73.15 °C−99.67 °F
273.15 K491.67 °R0 °C (Freezing)32 °F
293.15 K527.67 °R20 °C (Room Temp)68 °F
300 K540 °R26.85 °C80.33 °F
310.15 K558.27 °R37 °C (Body Temp)98.6 °F
373.15 K671.67 °R100 °C (Boiling)212 °F
500 K900 °R226.85 °C440.33 °F
1,000 K1,800 °R726.85 °C1,340.33 °F
5,000 K9,000 °R4,726.85 °C8,540.33 °F
5,778 K10,400.4 °R5,504.85 °C (Sun Surface)9,940.73 °F

Reference Points

0 K (Absolute Zero)0 °R
273.15 K (Freezing)491.67 °R
293.15 K (Room Temp)527.67 °R
373.15 K (Boiling)671.67 °R

Standard Values

100 K180 °R
200 K360 °R
300 K540 °R
500 K900 °R

High Temperatures

1,000 K1,800 °R
5,000 K9,000 °R
5,778 K (Sun)10,400.4 °R

Rankine to Kelvin Conversion Table 2026

Use this reverse reference table for rankine-to-kelvin lookups. All values use the exact factor of 1 °R = 0.5556 K (5/9 K).

Rankine (°R) Kelvin (K) Celsius (°C) Fahrenheit (°F)
0 °R0 K−273.15 °C−459.67 °F
100 °R55.56 K−217.59 °C−359.67 °F
200 °R111.11 K−162.04 °C−259.67 °F
459.67 °R255.37 K−17.78 °C0 °F
491.67 °R273.15 K0 °C32 °F (Freezing)
527.67 °R293.15 K20 °C68 °F (Room Temp)
540 °R300 K26.85 °C80.33 °F
671.67 °R373.15 K100 °C212 °F (Boiling)
900 °R500 K226.85 °C440.33 °F
1,800 °R1,000 K726.85 °C1,340.33 °F

Key Reference Points

0 °R0 K
491.67 °R273.15 K
527.67 °R293.15 K
671.67 °R373.15 K

Standard Values

100 °R55.56 K
200 °R111.11 K
540 °R300 K
900 °R500 K

High Values

1,800 °R1,000 K

What Is Kelvin? — Kelvin to Rankine Explained

The kelvin (K) is the SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature, named after Scottish physicist William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin (1824–1907). It is the primary temperature unit used in science worldwide. Unlike Celsius and Fahrenheit, kelvin has no degree symbol — temperatures are simply expressed as "K". The kelvin scale begins at absolute zero (0 K = −273.15°C), the point at which all molecular thermal motion theoretically ceases.

💡 Key Kelvin Reference Points

  • 0 K — Absolute zero (−273.15°C / −459.67°F) — lowest possible temperature
  • 273.15 K — Freezing point of water (0°C / 32°F)
  • 293.15 K — Standard room temperature (20°C / 68°F)
  • 310.15 K — Normal human body temperature (37°C / 98.6°F)
  • 373.15 K — Boiling point of water at sea level (100°C / 212°F)
  • 5,778 K — Surface temperature of the Sun

What Is Rankine (°R)?

The rankine (°R) is an absolute temperature scale used primarily in the United States engineering community, named after Scottish engineer and physicist William John Macquorn Rankine (1820–1872). Like kelvin, the rankine scale starts at absolute zero — but its degree size matches the Fahrenheit degree rather than the Celsius degree. Rankine is the absolute version of Fahrenheit, just as kelvin is the absolute version of Celsius. It is still used in some areas of US aerospace, chemical, and mechanical engineering.

✅ Where Is the Rankine Scale Used Today?

  • US aerospace engineering: Thermodynamic calculations in some legacy systems and NASA documents
  • Chemical engineering: Some US textbooks and process engineering calculations use °R
  • Thermodynamics courses: US universities teaching in imperial units use rankine alongside kelvin
  • Steam tables: Older US engineering steam tables reference both °R and °F values
  • HVAC engineering: Some US heating and cooling system calculations reference rankine

Key Facts — Kelvin to Rankine Conversion

🌡️ Exact Conversion Factor

1 kelvin = exactly 1.8 rankine (°R). This is an exact value, not an approximation. The factor of 1.8 = 9/5 comes from the ratio between Celsius and Fahrenheit degree sizes. To convert K to °R, simply multiply by 1.8. To convert °R to K, divide by 1.8 (or multiply by 5/9).

❄️ Shared Absolute Zero

Both kelvin and rankine begin at absolute zero — the same physical point. 0 K = 0 °R = −273.15°C = −459.67°F. This shared origin is what defines them as "absolute" scales and makes them the preferred temperature units for thermodynamic calculations where negative temperatures would be physically meaningless.

📐 Degree Size Difference

The key distinction between kelvin and rankine is degree size. One kelvin degree = one Celsius degree. One rankine degree = one Fahrenheit degree. Since 1°C = 1.8°F, it follows that 1 K = 1.8 °R. This means rankine values are always 1.8 times larger than their kelvin equivalents for any given temperature.

🚀 Aerospace Engineering Use

NASA and US aerospace engineers historically used rankine in thermodynamic equations when working in imperial units. Atmospheric re-entry temperatures, rocket engine combustion temperatures, and cryogenic fuel temperatures are sometimes reported in °R in legacy US technical documents, requiring kelvin-to-rankine conversion for cross-reference.

🔬 Thermodynamics Equations

In thermodynamics, absolute temperature scales (K or °R) are essential for equations like the ideal gas law (PV = nRT), entropy calculations, and the Carnot efficiency formula. Using Celsius or Fahrenheit in these equations produces incorrect results. Both K and °R give correct results as long as the appropriate gas constant R is used.

📚 Historical Context

William Rankine proposed his absolute temperature scale in 1859, just 11 years after William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) proposed the kelvin scale in 1848. Both scientists were working on the emerging field of thermodynamics simultaneously. While kelvin became the global SI standard, rankine remains entrenched in US imperial engineering traditions.

⚠️ Important: No Offset — Just Multiplication

Unlike converting between Celsius and Fahrenheit (which requires both multiplication and addition of an offset), converting between kelvin and rankine requires only multiplication by 1.8. This is because both scales share the same zero point (absolute zero). There is no offset to add or subtract — °R = K × 1.8 is the complete formula. Do not add 459.67 or 273.15 when converting between K and °R directly.

How to Convert Kelvin to Rankine — Step by Step

Follow these simple steps to accurately convert any kelvin value to rankine:

  • Step 1: Identify your temperature value in kelvin (e.g., 500 K)
  • Step 2: Multiply by 1.8: 500 × 1.8
  • Step 3: Result = 900 °R
  • Step 4: To reverse (rankine to kelvin), divide by 1.8 instead
  • Step 5: To also get Celsius, subtract 273.15 from the kelvin value
  • Step 6: To get Fahrenheit, subtract 459.67 from the rankine value

📐 Worked Examples — Kelvin to Rankine

Convert 273.15 K → 273.15 × 1.8 = 491.67 °R (Water Freezing Point)
Convert 373.15 K → 373.15 × 1.8 = 671.67 °R (Water Boiling Point)
Convert 900 °R → 900 ÷ 1.8 = 500 K
Convert 1,800 °R → 1,800 ÷ 1.8 = 1,000 K

Frequently Asked Questions — Kelvin to Rankine Converter

How do you convert kelvin to rankine?
To convert kelvin to rankine, multiply the kelvin value by 1.8. Formula: °R = K × 1.8. For example: 300 K × 1.8 = 540 °R. No offset is needed because both scales share the same zero point (absolute zero). This makes kelvin-to-rankine one of the simplest temperature conversions — just one multiplication step.
How many rankine is 1 kelvin?
1 kelvin equals exactly 1.8 rankine (°R). This is an exact conversion factor — 1 K = 9/5 °R = 1.8 °R. Conversely, 1 rankine = 5/9 kelvin ≈ 0.5556 K. The factor of 1.8 comes from the ratio between Fahrenheit and Celsius degree sizes, since rankine uses Fahrenheit-sized degrees and kelvin uses Celsius-sized degrees.
What is 0 kelvin in rankine?
0 kelvin equals 0 rankine. Both kelvin and rankine begin at absolute zero — the same physical point. 0 K = 0 °R = −273.15°C = −459.67°F. This shared zero point is what makes the conversion between them a simple multiplication with no offset, unlike conversions involving Celsius or Fahrenheit.
What is the difference between kelvin and rankine?
Both kelvin and rankine are absolute temperature scales starting at absolute zero, but they use different degree sizes. Kelvin uses Celsius-sized degrees (same as the SI system), while rankine uses Fahrenheit-sized degrees (same as the imperial system). Since a Fahrenheit degree is 1.8 times smaller than a Celsius degree, rankine values are always 1.8 times larger than kelvin values for any given temperature.
Why is rankine used in engineering?
Rankine is used in US engineering because it provides an absolute temperature scale compatible with the imperial unit system (Fahrenheit, feet, pounds). Thermodynamic equations like the ideal gas law require absolute temperatures. US engineers working in imperial units use rankine for the same reason SI engineers use kelvin — to avoid negative temperatures in thermodynamic equations. It remains common in some US aerospace, chemical, and mechanical engineering contexts.
What is room temperature in rankine?
Standard room temperature (20°C / 68°F / 293.15 K) equals 527.67 °R. Calculated as: 293.15 K × 1.8 = 527.67 °R. Alternatively: 68°F + 459.67 = 527.67 °R. Some engineering standards use 70°F (21.11°C / 294.26 K) as room temperature, which equals 529.67 °R in rankine.
How do I convert rankine to Celsius?
To convert rankine to Celsius: first convert rankine to kelvin by dividing by 1.8, then subtract 273.15 to get Celsius. Formula: °C = (°R ÷ 1.8) − 273.15. Example: 671.67 °R ÷ 1.8 = 373.15 K; 373.15 − 273.15 = 100°C. Our converter shows Celsius and Fahrenheit equivalents automatically alongside the kelvin and rankine values.
Can temperature be negative in kelvin or rankine?
No. Both kelvin and rankine are absolute scales with their zero point at absolute zero — the lowest physically possible temperature. You cannot have a temperature below 0 K or 0 °R under normal thermodynamic conditions. This is different from Celsius (which can go negative below 0°C) and Fahrenheit (which can go negative below 0°F). Negative absolute temperatures do appear in some quantum physics contexts but have specialised meaning beyond standard thermodynamics.

Temperature Conversion Resources

📚 NIST SI Unit Guide

The National Institute of Standards and Technology provides the official SI definitions for the kelvin unit, thermodynamic temperature standards, and accepted non-SI temperature units including rankine.

NIST Guide →

🚀 NASA Technical Standards

NASA uses both kelvin and rankine in technical documentation. Their engineering standards library provides context for how rankine is applied in aerospace thermodynamics and propulsion calculations.

NASA Standards →

🌍 BIPM Kelvin Definition

The International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) maintains the official SI definition of the kelvin, updated in 2019 to be based on the Boltzmann constant rather than the triple point of water.

Visit BIPM →