Check this out, quite informative
What happens at absolute zero? - physics-math - 17 February 2010 - New Scientist
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Thread: Absoulte Zero . . .
- 18 Feb. 2010 09:31am #1
Absoulte Zero . . .
- 20 Feb. 2010 07:52am #2
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Absolute zero is when all warmth is removed from an object. basically it turns it into matter that is devoid of any heat, making it the coldest substance in the universe. It is the absolute freezing point. it is thought that space, as a vacuum is at absolute zero at all times, but since no one can live in space without the proper equipment, no one will ever know. And since absolute zero cannot be obtained by current scientific means, we wont know what it is like until we are able to.
basically the theory behind absolute zero is like in that movie the Day After Tomorrow, when everything freezes instantly, just magnify that by i'd say about infinite times. Flash freeze on an epic level.Voted Hottest Male Member
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- 20 Feb. 2010 08:04am #3
Absolute zero, like the speed of light, is a mathematical limit. Nothing should be at absolute zero.
- 20 Feb. 2010 08:16am #4
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Exactly Alex, but it still remains that it is theorized and therefore will be widely accepted by the scientific community, but never made a law, which is why it is a theory since it is a mathmatical annomoly. Nothing can, or ever will be on the Kelvin scale, 0. It isnt possible.
But its still fun to theorize what capabilities it has, and what vapor it would be able to turn into an a metal or synthetic resource that cant be created at other temperatures. Just think of the [not even close to] unlimited possibilities.Voted Hottest Male Member
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- 20 Feb. 2010 12:53pm #5
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So... Absolute Zero is very cold? or a temperature?
Sorry but im just 13 i dont know these stuff
Simple is BEAUTIFUL!
- 20 Feb. 2010 12:56pm #6
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- 20 Feb. 2010 02:50pm #7
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@Viper+Snow: Absolute Zero is the coldest temperature possible. It is the start of the Kelvenic scale of temperature. Kelvin starts at zero and goes up. So in theory it is what the lowest possible temperature ever recorded would be.
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- 20 Feb. 2010 03:13pm #8
Absolute zero is just a damn number they come up with to make them look like they're doing something. It's the temperature at which everything stops, heat doesn't exist, and blah blah blah. They don't know if this will really happen, however, it's impossible to test it. Basically, it's like freezing point, without proof...
- 22 Feb. 2010 01:48am #9
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Actually absolute zero is not the temp. in space and is an actual limit we expect the universe to reach. Its the temp. we're heading towards. The universe is expanding outwards, as it does it cools. When the universe stops expanding it will have cooled to absolute zero and the whole thing will just stop. Time, space, planet, ect. everything just stops. There is ample evidence that this is the fate of our universe. There are only two real theories to the way the universe ends either it stops expanding or it recoils back into singularity. I remember that the expand theory is the one with far more evidence and that there is some huge flaw with the recoil one.
Also as a side note you're not looking at ice at absolute zero you're looking at the complete obliteration of energy, movement will stop on the subatomic level and beyond.
- 22 Feb. 2010 01:57am #10
- 22 Feb. 2010 01:59am #11
Exactly. Absolute zero is when an object has literally 0 kinetic energy, which means the subatomic particles are at a standstill and don't give off heat due to movement and friction.
At above post, I haven't done much reading on it, but you make it out as though the nanosecond absolute zero is reached, the entire universe will be doomed. I strongly doubt that is the case. I doubt the theory you talk about has a lot of scientific merit either way. Mind linking me to a reputable article/source?
- 22 Feb. 2010 02:24am #12
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I'll look for an article that's from my physics professor and my astronomy professor.
The closest I found thus far is a wiki: Future of an expanding universe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edit: found some more.
Future and Death of the Universe
If I recall they have evidence that cooling is happening and that there isn't the force or energy for the crush to happen so most people lean toward the freeze. Also um, there is some anomaly that exist, it might be dark matter but I recall it involving spots in space giving off massive radiation and nothing being there that in the crush theory can't exist but can in the freeze.
- 13 Mar. 2010 09:46am #13
So it's a simple 0 on the Kelvin Scale.