No. Zero K is considered absolute zero.
hypothetically it can. According to thermodynamics if temperature is dropped below -273 C (0 K) the volume becomes negative, which is not possible in our universe. But (hypothetically) there are infinite parallel universes consiqutively positive and negative. The positive one consists of matter and the negative of antimatter(proved practically at CERN) . volume of matter is positive and that of antimatter is negative. So by the time the temperature is dropped below 0 K all the matter is converted into antimatter and it eventually goes in another universe.
Absolute zero = 0 K = -273.15°C
The Kelvin scale is an absolute temperature scale; 0 K corresponds to a thermodynamic temperature of absolute zero.
273.15 K = 0 celcius or "centigrade".Kelvin is a temperature scale in which zero occurs at absolute zero and a change in temperature of one kelvin degree is equal to a temperature change of one celsius degree.At standard atmospheric pressure water freezes at 273.15 K (0o C) and boils at 373.15 K (100o C).
You cannot. Absolute zero (the temperature at which there is no thermal energy in an atomic lattice) is −273.15 degrees centigrade, or 0K (K = Kelvin). To reach this exact temperature is impossible, but by use of a "cryocooler" temperatures very near it can be reached.
Because absolute zero (or 0k) is the point at which EVERYTHING freezes. More specifically, absolute zero is defined to be the point where there is no energy. You can't have less than no energy.
It's Kelvin.It is significant in that it is below absolute zero (0 K) and therefore impossible to achieve.
No. 0 K is -273.15 deg C
It is a temperature (below −150 °C, −238 °F or 123 K).
No. Water remains a solid from 0 oC and below ... as long as the pressure doesn't change. At high pressures, water can be liquid at temperatures below 273 K (but not much below ... I think the lowest temperature you can have liquid water at is somewhere around 250 K).
it all depends on what scale. 0 degrees Kelvin (K) is the ultimate lowest temperature possible. In Celsius it is -273,15 and it can't get any lower. So 5 degrees below zero is not below 0 K. When you Celsius as scale it means it is 5 degrees below the point that water freezes.
-273.15 C
hypothetically it can. According to thermodynamics if temperature is dropped below -273 C (0 K) the volume becomes negative, which is not possible in our universe. But (hypothetically) there are infinite parallel universes consiqutively positive and negative. The positive one consists of matter and the negative of antimatter(proved practically at CERN) . volume of matter is positive and that of antimatter is negative. So by the time the temperature is dropped below 0 K all the matter is converted into antimatter and it eventually goes in another universe.
K is a symbol for Kelvin Temperature, which is a measurement of temperature based on the value 0 being the absolute zero. Also potassium has the symbol K in the Periodic Table.
0 K is equal to -459.67 °F The theoretical temperature "absolute zero" is 0 K, -273.15 °C, or -459.67 °F. 0°K = -459.67°F = -273.15 °C
0'C = ~273.15'K
0 c 273.15 k