- absolute zero
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the temperature of -273.16°C (-459.69°F), the hypothetical point at which all molecular activity ceases.
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Temperature at which a thermodynamic system (see thermodynamics) has the lowest energy, 0 kelvin (K).It corresponds to -459.67°F (-273.15°C) and is the lowest possible temperature theoretically achievable by a system. A gas at constant pressure contracts as the temperature is decreased. A perfect gas would reach zero volume at absolute zero. However, a real gas condenses to a liquid or a solid at a temperature higher than absolute zero. At absolute zero, the system's molecular energy is minimal and none is available for transfer to other systems. The Kelvin temperature scale has absolute zero as its zero point, and its fundamental unit is the kelvin.* * *
temperature at which a thermodynamic system has the lowest energy. It corresponds to −273.15 °C on the Celsius temperature scale and to −459.67 °F on the Fahrenheit temperature scale.The notion that there is an ultimately lowest temperature was suggested by the behaviour of gases (gas) at low pressures: it was noted that gases seem to contract indefinitely as the temperature is decreased. It appeared that an “ideal gas” at constant pressure would reach zero volume at what is now called the absolute zero of temperature. Any real gas actually condenses to a liquid or a solid at some temperature higher than absolute zero; therefore, the ideal gas law is only an approximation to real gas behaviour. As such, however, it is extremely useful.The concept of absolute zero as a limiting temperature has many thermodynamic consequences. For example, all molecular motion does not necessarily cease at absolute zero, but none is available for transfer to other systems, and it is therefore correct to say that the energy at absolute zero is minimal. (For more on this, see thermodynamics.)Any temperature scale having absolute zero for its zero point is termed an absolute temperature scale or a thermodynamic scale. In the International System of Units, the kelvin (K) scale is the standard for all scientific temperature measurements. Its fundamental unit, the kelvin, is identical in size to the Celsius degree and is defined as 1/273.16 of the “triple point” of pure water (0.01 °C)—i.e., the temperature at which the liquid, solid, and gaseous forms of the substance can be maintained simultaneously. In effect, the interval between this triple point and absolute zero comprises 273.16 kelvins; a temperature given in degrees Celsius can be converted to degrees Kelvin by adding 273.15.Another absolute temperature scale, once used for engineering applications in the United States, is the Rankine (°R) scale. The Rankine scale is based on the Fahrenheit (Fahrenheit temperature scale) temperature unit, which is 5/9 of the unit used in the Celsius and Kelvin scales. A temperature given in degrees Fahrenheit can be converted to degrees Rankine by adding 459.67.* * *
Universalium. 2010.