Thermodynamic temperature is measured using the Kelvin scale, which is based on the absolute zero point, where all molecular motion theoretically ceases. It is defined such that 0 K corresponds to -273.15°C. Temperature can be measured using various instruments, such as thermocouples, resistance temperature detectors (RTDs), and gas thermometers, which rely on the principles of thermal expansion or changes in electrical resistance. This scale is crucial for scientific and engineering applications, as it provides a standard reference for thermal energy and entropy calculations.
It is measured as the thermodynamic temperature - the temp on the Kelvin scale.
Kelvin is a measure of temperature or thermodynamic energy, and is an absolute measure. Degrees Celsius are a used to measure temperature on a scale with an arbitrary zero.
Temperature is thermodynamic energy.
The scientific word for temperature is "thermodynamic temperature".
The temperature of an object is a measure of the thermodynamic energy of the object.
The Joule temperature is a measure of how the energy of a thermodynamic system changes with temperature. It quantifies the relationship between temperature and energy transfer in the system.
Temperature is a measure of thermodynamic activity: it does not DO anything!
Kelvin is measured in units of temperature, specifically the SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature. It is used to measure temperature on the Kelvin scale, where 0 Kelvin represents absolute zero, the theoretical lowest possible temperature where molecular motion ceases.
An isothermal PV diagram illustrates a thermodynamic process where the temperature remains constant.
The Kelvin is the SI unit for thermodynamic temperature.
It is a measure of the thermodynamic energy in an object.
"blank" = "thermodynamic energy"