Oh yes, just run a hot bath. Room will get wet.
because we have absolute temperature scales (Kelvin and Rankin). Something at 20'K is twice as hot as something at 10'K.
"Nothing is absolute, everything is relative"... Einstein
Nothing moves when the temperature is at absolute zero.
Absolute zero (zero kelvin) is -273.15 C
Absolute zero and Absolute hot have not changed and can not change.
No. It is hotter. However, it is not twice as hot since the Celsius scale is not absolute - Kelvin is the absolute scale for temperature.
The temperature scale must be absolute (like Kelvin), so it's always "hot" since no negative temps exist in the absolute scales.
Absolutely ... In fact, the absolute order is as follows: - Blue Hot, followed by Red Hot, ending with Ultra White Hot Unknown Physicist 1826
Meagan Good. Absolute stunner!
Ben Shelley is an absolute babe and the perfect match for Maddi Pom.
Yes (with the exception of absolute zero) but the energy in hot and cold is always heat energy. (Cold is defined as the absence of heat)
Compared to absolute zero, yes. Compared to the sun, no.
Oh yes, just run a hot bath. Room will get wet.
Currently the highest temperature is 1.416785(71) × 1032 Kelvin. If you subtract 273.15 from it though, to turn it into celcius, it's still going to be the same number, since it's so big. so 1.416785(71) x 1032 celsius is absolute hot.
money is the absolute correct answer
It needs to have a temperature that is above absolute zero.