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Re: [curiosa] Re: Debian Centre of Mass



On Sat, Jul 07, 2001 at 08:09:50PM +0100, Dafydd Harries wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 07, 2001 at 08:24:43PM +0200, Martin F. Krafft wrote:
> > also sprach Steve M. Robbins (on Sat, 07 Jul 2001 01:54:25PM -0400):
> > > > nonono, it is physically impossible for *anything* to go colder than
> > > > 0K *because* all particles stop moving. kinetic energy (i.e.
> > > > temperature) doesn't care about the sign of the velocity (i.e. the
> > > > direction) since it's squared anyway.
> > > 
> > > For a system to have negative kinetic energy, 
> > > the particles just need to have imaginary speed...
> > 
> > i do admit that i am not a genious in particle physics, so could you
> > please elaborate? have negative kelvin temperatures been reached?
> > usually, i would say no and not believe anything else, but you never
> > know with the quantum stuff going on.
> > 
> > and imaginary speed... are you talking irrational numbers?
> 
> A lot of maths is based around them, and they are useful for many things (in
> maths). For example, what are the solutions to the equation

... and physics, and...

> But no, negative kelvin temperatures have not been reached, to the best of my
> knowledge. I don't think that 0 K (how are you supposed to abbreviate Kelvin
> without making it look like kilo) has been reached, but some people have
> gotten close.

0 K should not be reached for security reasons ;-)) And Kelvin is "K", kilo is "k".

-billy.

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Philipp Meier                              o-matic GmbH
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