Calgary has never been the coldest place on earth but it has been like 3rd or 4th
Oymyakon (Russian: Оймяко́н), a village (selo) in Oymyakonsky Ulus of the Sakha Republic, Russia, located along the Indigirka River. The lowest recorded temperature for any permanently inhabited location on Earth of −67.7 °C (−90 °F) was recorded there on February 6, 1933.
No, 0 Kelvin is the absolute coldest temperature possible in the universe, known as absolute zero. However, it has never been achieved in reality, as it is only a theoretical temperature. The coldest temperature recorded on Earth is around -128.6 degrees Fahrenheit (-89.2 degrees Celsius) in Antarctica.
The coldest matter in the world is a Bose-Einstein condensate of atoms that have been cooled to within tiny fractions of a kelvin of absolute zero (-273 C). The coldest material generally available is liquid nitrogen (temperature - 196 C, - 320 F). The coldest place on Earth is the Antarctic Plateau, with temperatures as low as -90 C (-129 F). One of the coldest naturally-occurring things on Earth is ice formed at very high pressures, with temperatures down to -140 C.
According to an article in CBS News back in 2003, the body of water surrounding Antarctica is the coldest body of water on Earth. Here is the link: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/02/12/60II/main540357.shtml
The coldest I've personally experienced was -55. I've been told it can venture down to the -60's though.
No, The tundra is the coldest place things live in nature.The poles are roughly the coldest place on earthEXCEPTIf you have ever been to Winnipeg, The corner of Portage and Main is the coldest place in the universe.
Well in every part of the Earth there is different temperatures so you can't really tell what the whole Earth temperature has been in it's coldest.
The coldest place on Earth is Antarctica, particularly the high ridge areas near the South Pole. The lowest recorded temperature on Earth, around -128.6 degrees Fahrenheit (-89.2 degrees Celsius), was measured at the Soviet Union's Vostok Station in Antarctica in 1983.
Deep space. Although some of it can be intensely hot, much of it is at approx 3 K which is - 270° C. On earth, the coldest place that is permanently inhabited is Oymyakon in Siberia (63° 15 N, 143° 12E). In 1924 a temperature of -71.2° C was recorded. The coldest place on earth, otherwise, is the Vostok [Research] Station in Antarctica (78° 28 S, 106° 50E). Temperatures of -89.2°C have been recorded.
Yes. The coldest temperatures on earth have been recorded at Vostok Station.
The coldest naturally occurring temperature yet observed is about 1 Kelvin (this occurred in outer space, not on Earth). In the laboratory, temperatures as low as 0.000 000 000 1 K have been produced.
The coldest weather in mawson that has been recored is -34.c
The Antarctic is the coldest desert on earth. Temperatures sometime plunge well below minus 100 degrees F.
It may be the coldest temperature that some locations have reached, but it's not even close to the coldest air temperature reached or certainly that which has been achieved with technology.
The coldest place so far found is the Boomerang (or Bow Tie) Nebula in the constellation of Centaurus.It has a temperature of -272°C, only 1 degree warmer than absolute zero (the lowest limit for all temperatures). Even the background radiation from the Big Bang is warmer (-270°C).It is the only object found so far that has a temperature lower than the background radiation.See related link for more informationAnother answer:The coldest place in the entire universe, so far as we know, is laboratories where research into Bose-Einstein condensates are going on. Temperatures of 500 picokelvins have been reached.Something in radiative equilibrium with the deepest of deep space would reach about 2.7 K, or 2,700,000,000,000 picokelvins, positively toasty by comparison.
17278 bc
yes, Smackdown has been to Calgary (I wish Drew McIntyre would visit ME)