Matrixman13 said:
Am i right when i say its impossible to reach absolute zero? Because of the uncertainty principle, you would need an infinite amount of energy to keep a particle completely still. Thanx
This has absolutely nothing to do with uncertainly principle. Are you trying to argue that \Delta E \Delta t \le \hbar, so you must have some flutuation in energy, and hence zero temperature is impossible? This principle has nothing to do with temperature. What this says is that you can violate conservation of energy temperarily, provided that you pay back what you borrow in short enough amount of time. (The more you "borrow", the shorter you can have it).
Definition of temperature can be seen from the thermodynamic identity:
dS=\frac{dE}{T}+\frac{pdV}{T}+\frac{\mu dN}{T}
So, \frac{1}{T}\equiv\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial E}\right)_{V,N}. In fact, I believe, you can in principle define temperature to be any (nice) fuction of this derivative. (In particular, you can definte temperature to be just this partial deriative, instead of the inverse of it, problem being: temperature then goes inverse as energy, contrary to what we are used to). If you hold everything else constant (volume and what not), and change energy slightly, what do you pay in term of entropy is, by definition, temperture (or the inverse of it). With this definition, temperature can indeed be positive, zero, or even negative. But the latter cases can only happen in nonequilibrium system or in phase transition (and it does--I just a qual. exam problem regarding a magnetic system that does just that!)
Since S=\log \Omega where \Omega is the number of state must be finite no matter how you change your energy, This partial derivative is also finite. In equilibrium, increasing energy (holding everything else constant), always means increasing entropy. So, the partial must be strickly positive...
In the situation, where your system is very very close to the ground state. Giving the system a little bit of energy makes it a much more flavorable for one or few particles to jump to a higher state, which greatly increases the entropy. This corresponds to when \frac{1}{T} is a huge number, i.e. low temperature.
In the situation, where particle of your system is already pretty randomized. Increasing energy doesn't improve your randomness anymore (kind of a measure of entropy). This derivative is small, i.e. high temperature.