View Full Version : Temperature in Sapce
Stalker23
Dec14-05, 03:41 PM
is there temperature in space?
if there are no particles, how can there be temperature?
and how can there be no temperature.....temperature is the differnce in energy between objects? right...
thanks
Astronuc
Dec14-05, 04:42 PM
Well temperature of matter reflects the kinetic energy (vibration or translational motion) of atoms. More generally it is related to the energy density of a material.
In space IIRC, the temperature is generally given about =<10 K, and perhaps that is more the case way out by the gas planets or toward Uranus and beyond.
There are atoms out there in space, by the density is extremely low, about one to a few atoms/cc.
http://cassfos02.ucsd.edu/public/tutorial/ISM.html
Stalker23
Dec14-05, 05:00 PM
does the space around those atoms have heat? or is it just...empty space, where radiation goes through
dicerandom
Dec14-05, 05:04 PM
The radiation itself has energy, and thus heat. The coldest you'll get out in the far reaches of space (read: far from any heat source such as a sun) is about 2.7K, the temperature of the cosmic microwave background radiation.
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