Negative Kelvin temperature? (Recent Science paper)

In summary: Thanks!In thermodynamics, temperature is defined via the relation between entropy and energy:$$\frac{1}{T}=\frac{dS}{dE}$$Normally, entropy increases with energy, and temperature is positive. With population inversion (see Bill_K), this can change, and an increased energy corresponds to a lower entropy - which gives a negative temperature.A negative temperature is not cold - it is hotter than everything with positive temperature.
  • #1
xnwkac
2
0
Chemistry student saying hi to everyone

Just read http://www.nature.com/news/quantum-gas-goes-below-absolute-zero-1.12146 about negative temperature. I knew I wouldn't understand a single sentence of the actual Science paper, but I took a look at the Science perspective (Lincoln D. Carr) but I didn't understand it either.

So I understand nothing about physics. But as far as I know, K=0 is defined as when all energy levels (vibrational movements etc) are in their respective ground state? So as little movements as possible. Then I don't really understand how you can get negative temperature.

If I understand the Perspective (http://www.sciencemag.org/content/339/6115/42.summary if you have access) correctly, at temperatures above 0, particles have a distribution where only a few are in a high-energy state. I get that.
But what's crazy is that to achieve negative temperatures, they mess with the particles so that MOST are in a high-energy state.
But then I really don't follow what happens next. K=0 is already as little movement as possible (as there is no excited state), so how could you get below that?

How would you explain this phenomena to someone with no physics knowledge?

Thanks!
 
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  • #2
Well if you have a collection of atoms or molecules which each have two energy levels Eexc and Egnd, where Eexc > Egnd, and the number of atoms in these states are Nexc and Ngnd respectively, then assuming everything is in thermal equilibrium, the Maxwell distribution says the ratio Nexc/Ngnd = exp-(Eexc - Egnd)/kT.

Normally Nexc < Ngnd and of course T is positive. But what if the excited state is overpopulated? That is, Nexc > Ngnd. Then for the same formula to work, and give a ratio greater than one, T must be negative.
 
  • #3
In thermodynamics, temperature is defined via the relation between entropy and energy:
$$\frac{1}{T}=\frac{dS}{dE}$$

Usually, entropy increases with energy, and temperature is positive. With population inversion (see Bill_K), this can change, and an increased energy corresponds to a lower entropy - which gives a negative temperature.

A negative temperature is not cold - it is hotter than everything with positive temperature.
 
  • #4
Thanks mfb - I read about this in New Scientist and was confused, but now I see
 
  • #5
Note that this is not entirely a new concept since population inversion is such a common phenomenon.
E.g. the noise temperature of a maser based amplifier can -at least in theory- be negative for exactly same reason.
 
  • #6
This is getting an undue amount of hype, partly thanks to misleading headlines such as "Atoms Reach Record Temperature, Colder than Absolute Zero." This is just wrong. Negative temperatures are hotter than hot rather than colder than cold.

The concept of negative temperatures arises from the thermodynamic definition of temperature, [itex]\frac 1 T = \frac{\partial S}{\partial E}[/itex] (see previous posts). It is possible to construct systems where adding energy decreases entropy, making 1/T (and hence T) negative.

This newest result has received a huge amount of hype. It's not new. It's older than me.

E. M. Purcell and R. V. Pound, A Nuclear Spin System at Negative Temperature, Phys. Rev. 81, 279 - 280 (1951)
 
  • #7
Baez is always a good route to check up on things to get a better idea of what is going on, I've found: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/ParticleAndNuclear/neg_temperature.html

Now, besides the hype, I don't recall hearing of a large ensemble of atoms being placed in a negative temperature state before, it seems like it IS interesting... but not "WORLD SHATTERING" interesting... more like "so did you hear about..." type stuff.
 
  • #8
The usual extended number line looks like this:

[tex](-\infty) --- (-1) --- (0) --- (1) --- (+\infty)[/tex]

(where I've rescaled the line so that I can draw it in finite space)

However, for the temperature extended number line, it's organized like this instead:

[tex](0^+) --- (1) --- (\infty) --- (-1) --- (0^-)[/tex]

where I've affixed a decoration to indicate the two endpoints are different.
 
  • #9
mfb said:
In thermodynamics, temperature is defined via the relation between entropy and energy:
$$\frac{1}{T}=\frac{dS}{dE}$$

Usually, entropy increases with energy, and temperature is positive. With population inversion (see Bill_K), this can change, and an increased energy corresponds to a lower entropy - which gives a negative temperature.

A negative temperature is not cold - it is hotter than everything with positive temperature.
Great reply! Most people think temperature as movement, but they just exploited a thermodynamic definition :uhh:

Hurkyl said:
The usual extended number line looks like this:

[tex](-\infty) --- (-1) --- (0) --- (1) --- (+\infty)[/tex]

(where I've rescaled the line so that I can draw it in finite space)

However, for the temperature extended number line, it's organized like this instead:

[tex](0^+) --- (1) --- (\infty) --- (-1) --- (0^-)[/tex]

where I've affixed a decoration to indicate the two endpoints are different.
Could you please clarify the lower number line? I have problems understanding it :frown: Are you talking about how hot it is in the temperature number line?
 
  • #10
xnwkac said:
Could you please clarify the lower number line? I have problems understanding it :frown: Are you talking about how hot it is in the temperature number line?

Both number lines are ordered from smallest to largest. So 1 is a colder temperature than -1.

*: In the extended sense. I don't think
 
  • #11
It's easier to understand if one looks at the more fundamental beta. Heat flows from lower to higher beta and that handles negative temperatures fine.
 
  • #12
Hurkyl said:
The usual extended number line looks like this:

[tex](-\infty) --- (-1) --- (0) --- (1) --- (+\infty)[/tex]

(where I've rescaled the line so that I can draw it in finite space)

However, for the temperature extended number line, it's organized like this instead:

[tex](0^+) --- (1) --- (\infty) --- (-1) --- (0^-)[/tex]

where I've affixed a decoration to indicate the two endpoints are different.

So T=-1 is hotter than T=infinity?
 
  • #13
Yes. That's essentially what I said in post #6 that "negative temperatures are hotter than hot."

Heat flows from an object with a finite negative temperature to an object with a finite positive temperature.
 
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  • #14
@D H:
I think you mixed positive and negative, otherwise I don't understand your post.

##\beta=\frac{1}{T}##-scale:
(+∞) ... (1) ... (0) ... (-1) ... (-∞)
Absolute zero . . . . . . . . . . hottest possible object
 
  • #15
mfb said:
@D H:
I think you mixed positive and negative, otherwise I don't understand your post.
You're right. I don't know what made me type that exactly backwards, but I obviously did just that. Thanks. I fixed my previous post.
 
  • #16
what was the bit about defying gravity and an analouge for the cosmological constant?

just more hype or soemthing future researchers in other fields might begin probing?
 
  • #17
For people not versed in statistical mechanics, the statistical mechanics definition of temperature may seem kind of weird. But really, all it is saying is that temperature is basically defined by which way energy (heat) will spontaneously flow if you put two items in contact. It doesn't say anything about the total energy in the items.

For positive temperatures, energy (heat) will spontaneously flow from a higher temperature to a lower temperature. This is also true for negative temperatures. But if you put a negative temperature item in contact with a positive temperature item, then heat will flow from the former to the latter. Ergo, all negative temperatures are hotter than all positive temperatures.

Absolute zero is still the coldest of temperatures. With negative temperatures, there is also an Absolute hot, which is the limit of temperature 0 approaching from the negative side. But since it is just a mathematical limit, it isn't something that can be achieved, just like absolute zero.
 
  • #18
Okay, so I get that the scale runs a bit weird due to the choice of definition for thermodynamic temperature.

But I'm still missing something here.
We already know that physics starts behaving weird when temperature and entropy both approach zero.
So what happens if they approach zero "from the other side".
Are there any weird or otherwise unexplained phenomena there?
Should we expect any?
 
  • #19
Entropy is positive, so it can't approach zero from the other side. Entropy tends to zero as you approach zero temperature from either side. If you plot entropy versus energy for a "finite system" (that is, a system with a maximum energy), the graph looks qualitatively like a parabola or a sine half period. See top plot of attachment. The maximum energy that the system can hold is 1.

At low energy, the entropy is near 0, because with little energy, there are few ways to arrange the energy. (Think of it this way. You have n energy quanta and m bins to put them into. You have fewer options if n is small.) But at high energy, entropy is also near 0, because the system is filling up with energy, and there are fewer ways to arrange the holes. (Since this is a finite system, you can only stick at most, say, 2 quanta of energy into each bin. Then, when they are almost all filled up, you have few options of ways to arrange the vacancies.) The vacancies or holes behave more or less analogously to energy quanta.

If you plot temperature versus energy, it looks like bottom plot of attachment. For this example, temperature doesn't ever reach 0. But for a larger system, temperature can get very close to 0, and entropy will get relatively close to 0.

So, in a system where there is a maximum energy capacity, a low energy (positive temperature) and high energy system (negative temperature) can behave very similarly. But the positive temperature system deals with quanta of energy and the negative temperature system deals with quanta of holes.
 

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  • #20
I can't understand the following from Baez:

" We define the temperature, T, by 1/T = dS/dE, so that the equilibrium condition becomes the very simple T1 = T2.

This statistical mechanical definition of temperature does in fact correspond to your intuitive notion of temperature for most systems. So long as dS/dE is always positive, T is always positive. For common situations, like a collection of free particles, or particles in a harmonic oscillator potential, adding energy always increases the number of available microstates, increasingly faster with increasing total energy. So temperature increases with increasing energy, from zero, asymptotically approaching positive infinity as the energy increases. "

Isnt S(E) a concave function in "common" situations?
Why does it say "faster with increasing total energy" ? If S increases faster and faster with increasing E, then the derivative dS/dE is larger and larger, then 1/T is larger and larger, than T is smaller and smaller . What am I missing?

thankx

Wentu
 
  • #21
Wentu said:
I can't understand the following from Baez:

" We define the temperature, T, by 1/T = dS/dE, so that the equilibrium condition becomes the very simple T1 = T2.

This statistical mechanical definition of temperature does in fact correspond to your intuitive notion of temperature for most systems. So long as dS/dE is always positive, T is always positive. For common situations, like a collection of free particles, or particles in a harmonic oscillator potential, adding energy always increases the number of available microstates, increasingly faster with increasing total energy. So temperature increases with increasing energy, from zero, asymptotically approaching positive infinity as the energy increases. "

Isnt S(E) a concave function in "common" situations?
Why does it say "faster with increasing total energy" ? If S increases faster and faster with increasing E, then the derivative dS/dE is larger and larger, then 1/T is larger and larger, than T is smaller and smaller . What am I missing?

thankx

Wentu

Normally S increases slower and slower with increasing E.
That is why T increases with increasing E.

However, for some substances, at some point S starts decreasing with increasing E.
This is when the sign of the temperature flips.

After that S starts decreasing quicker and quicker, making temperature (which is the inverse) approach zero.
 
  • #22
Serena, this is exactly what I am asking. I understood it should be like you are saying, but Baez is saying that in COMMON systems Entropy increases FASTER with INCREASING energy and this means temperature rises... and this is contrary to what you said (and to what I understood so far)
I am asking why Baez is saying something that seems contrary to what i have read elsewhere

thankx

W.
 
  • #23
Baez is saying that the number of available microstates increases faster with energy. But entropy is related to the logarithm of the available microstates, and that increases slower.
 
  • #24
Hurkyl said:
[tex](0^+) --- (1) --- (\infty) --- (-1) --- (0^-)[/tex]

Can someone add a couple more values after the +infinite and -1 value?
 
  • #25
##(\infty) - (-10^{100}) - (-10^5) - (-10) - (-1) - (-0.1) - (0^-)##
Like that?
The first one is actually ##\pm \infty## and not a real number, as it corresponds to ##\frac{1}{T}=0##.
 
  • #26
Yeah I get it now.
 
  • #27
I like Serena said:
However, for some substances, at some point S starts decreasing with increasing E.
This is when the sign of the temperature flips.

After that S starts decreasing quicker and quicker, making temperature (which is the inverse) approach zero.

I understand how in a situation where you get the usual entropy at a high energy, and the molecules sort of "peak" in their form or melt or destabilize further into a gas. Where I'm confused is on the loss of energy and S reaching equilibrium for the system... if that system is aided in cooling it to where S drops faster than E can balance, what's to stop it from becoming -K?

Also, if the motion of the intended atoms becomes negative K, from a relativity perspective, wouldn't they still have motion? And from a logic standpoint (and what I know about these things)... approaching absolute zero in an ideal system is really just continually slowing the entropy until you reach a "new" absolute zero... a new limit for how much you can slow something before the inverse energy (cold) catches up with the rest of the system and balances out like what would happen if you were adding energy and not taking it away.

P.S. - Think I sort of answered my own questions... tends to happen when I type thoughts out. Help, clarifications, corrections, a dunce hat-etc would be appreciated.
 
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  • #28
At some point you can no longer extract energy from a system.
When that happens its entropy approaches zero, which is basically what the third law of thermodynamics states.
 
  • #29
What stops it from being possible?

Edit: I mean, I would assume it's the limit of the system being finite, and time restrictions. Would increasing the system to a (insert degree of hugeness required) change anything? Or just allowing the system to be considered limitless?
 
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  • #30
If you find some source of materials with negative temperatures (you won't), maybe.
That is as useful as a statement "I can use [magical box that always maintains 1000K at its outside] to extract as much energy as I want!". It is true, but that magical box does not exist.
 
  • #31
Hold on! Let's clear something up. How does negative temperature hotter than all positive temperatures. I need clarification...
Hurkyl said:
Both number lines are ordered from smallest to largest. So 1 is a colder temperature than -1.

*: In the extended sense. I don't think[Hold
 
  • #32
The old posts pretty much explained every bit of it. Which part are you having trouble with?
 
  • #33
So if a negative temperature object is in contact with a positive temperature object then heat energy will flow from the negative temperature object to the positive energy object?

If this is so then will the negative temperature object get less negative in temperature over time (colder) until it reaches absolute zero and then becomes a positive temperature object?
 
  • #34
No. If you cool a negative temperature object, the temperature will become more negative until it goes to negative infinity and then "crosses over" to positive infinity and then continues to cool toward absolute zero. This looks weird because temperature is defined strangely. The reciprocal of the temperature is more fundamental than the temperature and behaves more intuitively as you cool it. The inverse temperature smoothly increases from negative to positive, crossing zero when the temperature crosses infinity.
 
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Likes mfb
  • #35
My question is concerning what will happen to the negative temperature object if it comes in contact with the positive temperature object.
 
<h2>1. What is a negative Kelvin temperature?</h2><p>A negative Kelvin temperature is a temperature scale that is below absolute zero, which is the lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale. It is a theoretical concept and has not been achieved in any physical system.</p><h2>2. How is a negative Kelvin temperature possible?</h2><p>A negative Kelvin temperature is possible in certain systems where the atoms have a net attraction to each other. This causes the particles to have a negative absolute temperature, meaning that they have more energy at lower temperatures than at higher temperatures.</p><h2>3. What are the implications of a negative Kelvin temperature?</h2><p>A negative Kelvin temperature has significant implications for our understanding of thermodynamics and the behavior of matter at extreme temperatures. It challenges our current understanding of the laws of thermodynamics and could potentially lead to new discoveries in the field of physics.</p><h2>4. Has a negative Kelvin temperature been achieved in a lab?</h2><p>No, a negative Kelvin temperature has not been achieved in a lab. However, scientists have been able to create systems that exhibit properties similar to a negative Kelvin temperature, such as Bose-Einstein condensates.</p><h2>5. How does a negative Kelvin temperature relate to absolute zero?</h2><p>Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale, which is equivalent to -273.15 degrees Celsius. A negative Kelvin temperature is below absolute zero and represents a temperature scale where the particles have more energy at lower temperatures than at higher temperatures.</p>

1. What is a negative Kelvin temperature?

A negative Kelvin temperature is a temperature scale that is below absolute zero, which is the lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale. It is a theoretical concept and has not been achieved in any physical system.

2. How is a negative Kelvin temperature possible?

A negative Kelvin temperature is possible in certain systems where the atoms have a net attraction to each other. This causes the particles to have a negative absolute temperature, meaning that they have more energy at lower temperatures than at higher temperatures.

3. What are the implications of a negative Kelvin temperature?

A negative Kelvin temperature has significant implications for our understanding of thermodynamics and the behavior of matter at extreme temperatures. It challenges our current understanding of the laws of thermodynamics and could potentially lead to new discoveries in the field of physics.

4. Has a negative Kelvin temperature been achieved in a lab?

No, a negative Kelvin temperature has not been achieved in a lab. However, scientists have been able to create systems that exhibit properties similar to a negative Kelvin temperature, such as Bose-Einstein condensates.

5. How does a negative Kelvin temperature relate to absolute zero?

Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature on the Kelvin scale, which is equivalent to -273.15 degrees Celsius. A negative Kelvin temperature is below absolute zero and represents a temperature scale where the particles have more energy at lower temperatures than at higher temperatures.

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