I think the term you're looking for is cryogenic processing. The NIST defines cryogenic temperatures as those below 93.2 Kelvin. Slowly reducing temperatures, to prevent damage from thermal shock, to below 93.2 Kelvin is a cryogenic process.
You don't. Absolute zero can be approached, but never reached.
You don't. Absolute zero can be approached, but never reached.
You don't. Absolute zero can be approached, but never reached.
You don't. Absolute zero can be approached, but never reached.
No, that is just a hypothetical term used as a benchmark for no temperature. It is impossible for an obect to have no temperature because an object has to have at least a little thermal energy.
Yes because absolute zero is defined as -236celsius
You don't. Absolute zero can be approached, but never reached.
Absolute zero, around -270 C.See related link.
Absolute zero is defined by world-wide agreement as O K Kelvin, -273.15° C and -459.67° F. The coldest temperature recorded in Antarctica -- about 30 degrees F colder than the North Pole -- was colder than -89° F. Now, can you answer this question.
At -40 they're the same. Neither is colder, they are scales of measurements for temperature. Those are two scales of temperature. Neither can be defined as being colder. One could say that Fahrenheit is the "colder" scale because -1 degree Fahrenheit is colder than -1 degree Celsius. The "coldest" scale I know of is Kelvin, which defines 0 degrees Kelvin as -273.15 degrees Celsius (Absolute Zero).
NO. 0 in Kelvin is THE absolute zero. There is no colder temperature Actually, yes. quantum gas reach temperatures a few billionths of a kelvin below zero.
The freezing temperature of water is 0 degrees celsius or 32 degrees fahrenheit so it is colder than the freezing temperature of water.
No, but they are related. Absolute zero is the coldest possible temperature. Absolute temperature is the temperature above this coldest possible temperature - i.e., how much hotter is it than the coldest theoretically possible temperature. Celsius temperature isn't absolute. It starts from the temperature of freezing water, and it needs negative numbers for anything colder than that. Fahrenheit temperature isn't absolute. It says that zero is 32 degrees colder than freezing water, and it needs negative numbers for anything colder than that. Absolute temperature starts from absolute zero. Nothing is colder than that, so absolute temperature is never a negative number.
No. 0 degrees K(elvin) is what is known as absolute zero. it is the coldest temperature possible.
It is the coldest temperature. Nothing is colder than absolute zero. Scientists do know what happens in absolute zero because to get it to absolute zero, they have to put the object in something colder. But like mentioned above, nothing is colder than absolute zero. It is pretty much the end of the thermometer.
It is the coldest temperature. Nothing is colder than absolute zero. Scientists do know what happens in absolute zero because to get it to absolute zero, they have to put the object in something colder. But like mentioned above, nothing is colder than absolute zero. It is pretty much the end of the thermometer.
absolute zero
Absolute Zero.
absolute zero, the temperature at which all molecules stop moving.
Because - 'absolute zero' (0 Kelvin or -373 Celsius) - is the temperature at which everything freezes. Scientific testing has not found any substance or object that does not freeze below absolute zero.
Temperature is movement of particles. The harder they move, the hotter they get. When particles are not moving at all their temperature is 0K (absolute zero)
it is not possible to achieve this temperature because there is nothing as cold absolute zero with which to remove thermal energy with(it would actually need to be colder), they have come very close with laser cooling another problem is that at absolute zero all molecular motion stops, introducing a measuring device would add energy to the system causing it to move and thus leave absolute zero.
Absolute zero, around -270 C.See related link.
Kelvin was the scientist who thought up the Kelvin scale of temperatures. 273.15 below zero on the Celsius scale is "absolute zero"; the lowest possible temperature where any activity due to heat is stopped. Theoretically it is not possible to reach absolute zero in anything because to reach it you would need something colder to absorb the heat, and there is nothing colder.