ISo if quantum mechanics makes it impossible to reach this temp why is it classified as a real temp? Is it simply to say "well, if you could reach this temp, this is when all particals would lose all motion"?
And if all particals can never reach that temp and lose motion is it safe to say after all is said and done there will still be some dynamic to the universe itself? Never growing still and never stopping it's expansion?
I also like the comment that absolute zero changes based on pressure. At extremely high pressures, "absolute zero" can be reached only because the temperature reading matches the predefined number, not because all molecular motion has stopped.Actually that's me regurgitating interesting things I read in my science book in highschool. May not be accurate. Oh well.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- MIT scientists have cooled a sodium gas to the lowest temperature ever recorded -- only half-a-billionth of a degree above absolute zero. The work, to be reported in the Sept. 12 issue of Science, bests the previous record by a factor of six, and is the first time that a gas was cooled below 1 nanokelvin (one-billionth of a degree).
is there an absolute highest possible temp wherein particles would just simply puff out or vaporize to nothingness? whats it called?