Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?
  Home FAQ Contact Sign in
alt.philosophy only
 
Advanced search
POPULAR GROUPS

more...

alt.philosophy Profile…
 Up
Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Sanny
Date: May 30, 2008 10:46

First What is Temperature?

Temperature is due to movement of electrons/ molecules in a Solid/
Liquid/ Gases/ Plasmas.

As we increase temperature the speed of atomic particle increase and
they vibrate faster and we see higher temperature.

We say 0 Kelvin is minimum Temperature one can ever attain?

At 0 Kelvin does Electron become Stationary?

And Why we consider temperature of only large bodies.

What about the Temperature of an Atom?

Say an Electron is moving what is the Temperature of Electron?

What about temperature of Protons and Neutron?

Are these subatomic particles not Vibrating and having different
temperatures?

At 0 Kelvin will Electrons/ Protons come to rest?

What is the minimum temperature Attained by Humans in Laboratory?

Will Speed of light remains C at 0 Kelvin?

Bye
Sanny
24 Comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Eric Gisse
Date: May 30, 2008 10:57

On May 30, 9:46 am, Sanny hotmail.com> wrote:
> First What is Temperature?

A scalar quantity that parameterizes the Maxwell-Boltzmann
distribution.
>
> Temperature is due to movement of electrons/ molecules in a Solid/
> Liquid/ Gases/ Plasmas.

I always thought the quantity was "pressure".
>
> As we increase temperature the speed of atomic particle increase and
> they vibrate faster and we see higher temperature.
>
> We say 0 Kelvin is minimum Temperature one can ever attain?

Who is "we" ?

Open a thermodynamics textbook and read about the laws of
thermodynamics.
>
> At 0 Kelvin does Electron become Stationary?
Show full article (1.81Kb)
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Sanny
Date: May 30, 2008 11:11

On May 30, 10:57 pm, Eric Gisse gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 30, 9:46 am, Sanny hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> First What is Temperature?
>
> A scalar quantity that parameterizes the Maxwell-Boltzmann
> distribution.
>
>
>
>> Temperature is due to movement of electrons/ molecules in a Solid/
>> Liquid/ Gases/ Plasmas.
>
> I always thought the quantity was "pressure".
>
>
>
>> As we increase temperature the speed of atomic particle increase and
>> they vibrate faster and we see higher temperature.
> ...
Show full article (2.01Kb)
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Juan R. González-Álvarez
Date: May 30, 2008 11:13

Eric Gisse wrote on Fri, 30 May 2008 10:57:13 -0700:
> On May 30, 9:46 am, Sanny hotmail.com> wrote:
>> First What is Temperature?
>
> A scalar quantity that parameterizes the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution.

Very inaccurate definition.
>> Temperature is due to movement of electrons/ molecules in a Solid/
>> Liquid/ Gases/ Plasmas.
>
> I always thought the quantity was "pressure".

Please do not think more today :-)
> Open a thermodynamics textbook and read about the laws of
> thermodynamics.

Good advice :-)
>
>> At 0 Kelvin does Electron become Stationary?
>
> Open a quantum mechanics textbook and read about the uncertainty
> principle.
Show full article (0.99Kb)
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Eric Gisse
Date: May 30, 2008 11:14

On May 30, 10:11 am, Sanny hotmail.com> wrote:

[snippy]
>
> You do not know the answer. Do you?

I do, but what would you gain by having me answer all your questions?
You aren't asking anything fundamental or really interesting.

Would you like some references for thermodynamics and quantum
mechanics?
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Sanny
Date: May 30, 2008 11:25

>> You do not know the answer. Do you?
>
> I do, but what would you gain by having me answer all your questions?
> You aren't asking anything fundamental or really interesting.
>
> Would you like some references for thermodynamics and quantum
> mechanics?

These are very tough things for my small mind to handle. I just want
simple answer.

Bye
Sanny
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Puppet_Sock
Date: May 30, 2008 11:28

On May 30, 2:25 pm, Sanny hotmail.com> wrote:
[snip]
> I just want
> simple answer.

The answer is "six." Is that simple enough for you?
Socks
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Juan R. González-Álvarez
Date: May 30, 2008 11:28

Sanny wrote on Fri, 30 May 2008 10:46:19 -0700:
> First What is Temperature?

It is defined like

1/T = (partial S / partial U)

S is entropy and U internal energy.
> Temperature is due to movement of electrons/ molecules in a Solid/
> Liquid/ Gases/ Plasmas.
>
> As we increase temperature the speed of atomic particle increase and
> they vibrate faster and we see higher temperature.
>
> We say 0 Kelvin is minimum Temperature one can ever attain?

Yes it is also named the zero absolute.
> At 0 Kelvin does Electron become Stationary?

They would stay in electronic ground state.
> And Why we consider temperature of only large bodies.

There is not need for that.
> What about the Temperature of an Atom?
Show full article (1.59Kb)
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Eric Gisse
Date: May 30, 2008 11:41

On May 30, 10:25 am, Sanny hotmail.com> wrote:
>>> You do not know the answer. Do you?
>
>> I do, but what would you gain by having me answer all your questions?
>> You aren't asking anything fundamental or really interesting.
>
>> Would you like some references for thermodynamics and quantum
>> mechanics?
>
> These are very tough things for my small mind to handle. I just want
> simple answer.

Then pick a different hobby.
>
> Bye
> Sanny
no comments
Re: Whjat is the minimum Temperature Possible?         


Author: Abo
Date: May 30, 2008 11:49

Sanny wrote:
> What is the minimum temperature Attained by Humans in Laboratory?

According to research done by the Luftwaffe during WW2 humans pass into
unconsciousness and die at about 25 deg C

--
Abo
no comments
1 2 3