Answer Yes, you can. I think the answer is no. A physical object in a vacuum can have some energy/heat in it, and the energy associated with electromagnetic radiation can have energy/heat associated with it, but the vacuum itself cannot. ______________________________________________________________________ There is no such thing as a vacuum.
Temperature cannot exist in a vacuum because there is nothing in a vacuum.
exhaut steam temperature raising due to cooling water inlet temperature raise vacuum pullying is not proper scale formation in turbine blades
Double glazing keeps your house at a constant temperature because there is a vacuum in between two layers of glass. There is no air or particles of any kind in a vacuum, so heat cannot be conducted through it. Therefore the heat inside the building cannot be lost to outside, and vice versa
It was I. I invented the vacuum. Who am I? Your mother.
I think you have to make it out of plastic then connect to the vacuum
we need vacuum to remove moisture from tank
In a vacuum temperature is inapplicable. Temperature is a measure of the kinetic energy of the molecules that fill a defined space. In a vacuum there are no molecules so --- no temperature.
A perfect (completely empty) vacuum would have no temperature, since temperature implies movement of particles. However, any real vacuum has some particles (the density is simply less than normal air pressure, for instance); the temperature in this case can vary, just as the temperature of air, or the temperature of water, can vary.
In an absolutely perfect vacuum, there is no defined temperature at all. The temperature simply doesn't mean anything. Of course, there isn't really anything that is a perfect vacuum.At very high vacuum, at equilibrium, the temperature will be determined by whatever the container holding the vacuum is in thermal contact with. Something inside an imperfect vacuum isn't at any particular temperature -- if it is at equilibrium, it will be at whatever temperature the things around it are at. However, the rate at which is reaches equilibrium with may be very slow because of the vacuum. If it not at equilibrium, then the object in the vacuum will be at whatever temperature it was set at until it reaches equilibrium with the things around it.
because there is no air
Both time and temperature can decrease the vacuum draw of an evacuated tube. Hence the provided expiration dates and storage temperature of tubes. The vacuum of a tube will decrease if it is too old or if stored at a colder temperature than recommended.
Quality vacuum gage is required ;-) engine at running temperature around 18 to 20 inches Hg = vacuum
Temperature is the vibration of particles.In a true vacuum there are no particles.Therefore, a true vacuum cannot have a temperature other than 0K (approx-273C) i.e. absolute zero
When engine temperature rises, the brake sees vacuum and pulls the choke open.
because they decompose at higher temperature.. under vacuum they can be boiled at lower temperature than their boiling point
The proper way to take the temperature of vacuum packed foods is with a metal stem thermometer. To take the correct temperature, put the thermometer in the center of the food.
It shouldn't be left at room temperature. The vacuum packaging sets up a perfect environment for Clostridium botulinum.
The proper way to take the temperature of vacuum packed foods is with a metal stem thermometer. To take the correct temperature, put the thermometer in the center of the food.