- Nitrogen gas become a solid.
- Absolute zero is intangible.
Yes, but only at absolute zero, which has not been reached yet. For all intents and purposes it will never happen, as absolute zero is almost impossible to reach as heat is being transfered as long as there is contact.
If you mean, thermal motion, if an object is cooled down, the particles will move slower. Absolute zero (no particle movement, and no other kind of internal energy) can be approached, but it can't be reached completely.If you mean, thermal motion, if an object is cooled down, the particles will move slower. Absolute zero (no particle movement, and no other kind of internal energy) can be approached, but it can't be reached completely.If you mean, thermal motion, if an object is cooled down, the particles will move slower. Absolute zero (no particle movement, and no other kind of internal energy) can be approached, but it can't be reached completely.If you mean, thermal motion, if an object is cooled down, the particles will move slower. Absolute zero (no particle movement, and no other kind of internal energy) can be approached, but it can't be reached completely.
"Absolute zero" (Zero Kelvin) is a theoretical temperature, at which all atomic motion stops. This temperature can't be reached in practice, but we can get very close. Laboratories on Earth have reached temperatures of less than a microKelvin (millionth of Kelvin, or millionth of a degree from absolute zero). In outer space, it usually doesn't get much colder than about 3 Kelvin, because of a background radiation equivalent to that temperature.
when water it reached it's boiling point it starts to become a gas and disappear into the air so it would be hard to keep on getting hotter.
Yes, well at least vibrate, like those in a solid.
Nope, never, absolute zero cannot be reached by artificial or natural means.
That is known as absolute zero, at which point matter ceases to move. Unfortunately, this state is impossible.
Nope, never, absolute zero cannot be reached by artificial or natural means.
It can't be reached. However, scientists have managed to approach absolute zero within less than one microkelvin.
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Do you mean 'reached the concept of absolute zero'? I ask this because I was always told that you cannot reach absolute zero, because absolute zero is the the lowest temperature in the universe. It is like trying to go faster than the speed of light. It hasn't been reached, yet.
Nitrogen cycle is conversion of air nitrogen to soluble form of nitrogen and then back to air nitrogen. Lighting is part of nitrogen cycle. When an animal dies and the body decays the nitrogen in many forms in the animal body reached back to the place where it came from.
Absolute zero is achieved when the atoms in a substance stop moving completely. At -273.15C or -459.67F. True absolute zero cannot be reached, but it can be approached to within a few millionths of a degree.
No, nothing ever can reach absolute zero. The reasons are scientific, but the lowest we've ever gone to is 450 picokelvin (that is 0.000000000045° kelvin).The third law of http://www.answers.com/topic/thermodynamics is an axiom of nature regarding http://www.answers.com/topic/entropy and the impossibility of reaching http://www.answers.com/topic/absolute-zero of http://www.answers.com/topic/temperature.
No. Molecules never stop moving if they are about absolute zero in temperature.
it is zero on the kelvin scale, there is absolutely no particle movement, and it has never been reached
Many countless trillions and trillions of trillions of years will pass before Canada gets close to absolute zero, and this will probably only happen in the event that theories of an ever-expanding universe are true. Absolute zero is NOT the zero degrees that we read on any temperature system of practical use. It is difficult to produce this temperature in a laboratory, and it really cannot be reached in an absolute sense, although we can come close enough to observe the Bose-Einstein Condensate [another topic altogether]. I believe it is correct to say that nothing on earth, from the beginning of its formation to the present, has ever reached absolute zero naturally. Absolute zero is impossible everywhere unless an extremely extreme ice age happens. When absolute zero happens no movement is possible. Canada is not that cold, absolute zero is between -270 and -280 C, but I can't remember the exact temperature. Southern Canada rarely gets below -30 C, none of Canada is ever colder than (and doesn't reach) -50 C, but that is only in the very northern parts.