It is an slandered temperature that has been taken as reference. No system has this temperature some exception are there for perpection systems.
Temperatures can approach, but never reach, absolute zero. This is about -273 degrees C.
Absolute zero is an extreme temperature: at this temperature any motion ceases, it is the total death.And this temperature is out of reach.
Scientists hypothesize that the substance could reach the temperature of absolute zero. There were wrong. Absolute zero is the state of matter when none of its particles are moving.
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.
At absolute zero, the object would lose all energy, down to the atomic level. Atoms without energy are not atoms. Objects, mass, cannot exist without atoms.
no
Temperatures can approach, but never reach, absolute zero. This is about -273 degrees C.
Temperatures can approach, but never reach, absolute zero. This is about -273 degrees C.
Nope; it would never go below room temperature. It is technically impossible to reach absolute zero
Absolute zero is an extreme temperature: at this temperature any motion ceases, it is the total death.And this temperature is out of reach.
No. They are as frozen still as they can ever be. It is said to be scientifically impossible to actually reach absolute zero.
Scientists hypothesize that the substance could reach the temperature of absolute zero. There were wrong. Absolute zero is the state of matter when none of its particles are moving.
-273 degrees celsius is considered absolute zero, meaning that -273 degrees celsius (or 0 kelvin) is the lowest possible temperature.
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.
MIT PUBLISHED AN ARTICLE IN SEPTEMBER OF 2003 WHERE THEY WERE ABLE TO REACH HALF A BILLIONTH OF A DEGREE ABOVE ABSOLUTE ZERO MIT PUBLISHED AN ARTICLE IN SEPTEMBER OF 2003 WHERE THEY WERE ABLE TO REACH HALF A BILLIONTH OF A DEGREE ABOVE ABSOLUTE ZERO
Rain in summer, winter dry, average temperature 17C but highvelt temperatures can reach 40C
Weathers boiling point?.... if you mean rain, its water so .. 100 degrees?..