"The statement that is found so often in elementary books and newspaper articles, that at the temperature T = 0 all molecular activity ceases, is entirely erroneous. Modern atomic theory shows that the atoms of a solid (or a liquid in the case of helium) at absolute zero have a store of kinetic energy, called zero point energy, which may be considerable. As a matter of fact, the zero point energy of liquid helium is so large (three times as large as the heat of vaporization) that a crystal of helium under its own vapor pressure would be unstable. Under pressure, however, the reduction in volume brings the helium atoms nearer together so that the fields of force may interlock and a crystalline solid may form."
Mark W. Zemansky, Temperatures Very Low and Very High
Temperatures very close to absolute zero have been achieved. Wear your mittens and galoshes so you don't get frostbite.
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2001/NehemieCange.shtml
"The limit of all temperature is absolute zero. For many years physicists have been closing in on absolute zero. No one will ever succeed in reaching it, but many have come very close. To reach a very low temperature, such gases as helium have to be liquefied and such a methods have been used by physicists in Bell Labs in Holmdel, NJ. In 1987 physicist Steven Chu, a former Bell Labs scientist, and other physicists by the names of William Phillips and Claude Cohen-Tannoudji who also worked in the same lab came up with the idea of trapping atoms with lasers by lowering the temperature during their conversation over a lunch table in the lab's cafeteria. Chu and his companions, Phillips and Cohen-Tannoudji, figured out a way to lower the atom's temperature to one ten-millionth of a Kelvin above absolute zero or 0.1 µK. In 1997, ten years after patenting the idea of trapping atoms with lasers by lowering the temperature, he honored with a Nobel Prize in physics for all his work in Bell Labs. After 20 years of constant research the Low Temperature Lab at the Helsinki University of Technology managed to reach 280 pK or 280 trillionths of a Kelvin. However, in the year 2000 that record was surpassed when a piece of rhodium metal was cooled to 100 pK or 0.000,000,000,1 degrees above absolute zero by a team of physicists at this same lab."
http://ufbir.ifas.ufl.edu/chap04.htm
"In laboratory tests, Hinton (1960) found that dehydrated larvae of the African chironomid Polypedilum vanderplanki (Diptera) could survive submersion in liquid helium (-270 C). This phenomenon seems related to its ability to tolerate extreme desiccation."
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Temperature is defined formally in thermodynamic terms (partial derivative of internal energy with respect to entropy at constant volume, for example), so descriptions rendered in terms of molecular motion and such are likely to be slightly off the mark, and thermodynamic definitions incomprehensible.