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Why the Kelvin termo scale has no negative values?
I'm just asking if some one knows and is it ok and why.
I'm just asking if some one knows and is it ok and why.
The discussion centers around the Kelvin temperature scale, specifically why it does not include negative values. Participants explore the implications of absolute zero, the nature of temperature, and the relationship between kinetic energy and temperature, as well as hypothetical scenarios involving negative mass and alternative temperature definitions.
Participants generally agree that absolute zero is a fundamental limit of the Kelvin scale, but there are multiple competing views regarding the implications of reversing motion, the concept of negative mass, and the existence of negative temperatures in certain materials. The discussion remains unresolved on these points.
Some participants reference the ideal gas law and its relationship to temperature, while others note the limitations of definitions and the complexities introduced by quantum mechanics. The discussion includes assumptions about the nature of temperature and motion that are not universally accepted.
Posted by Thallium
What are the particles like at a lower minus-temperature on the Celsius scale then, if they are half stationary at the zero point on Kelvin?
The temperature is kinetic energy dependent.Originally posted by krab
Talking about reversing the motion misses the point. If you take a given system at temperature T, and reverse all the motions, it would have exactly the same temperature T; not -T.