Difference between revisions of "Absolute zero" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:helium-II-creep.png|frame|right|Near absolute zero (0 K), matter exhibits strange properties. For example, below a temperature of 2.1768 K (the "lambda point"), helium is a superfluid that "creeps" along surfaces against the force of gravity and forms a film ("Rollin film"). Here, the Rollin film covers the interior of the larger, sealed container. After a short while, the levels of helium in the outer and inner containers will equalize.]]
 
[[Image:helium-II-creep.png|frame|right|Near absolute zero (0 K), matter exhibits strange properties. For example, below a temperature of 2.1768 K (the "lambda point"), helium is a superfluid that "creeps" along surfaces against the force of gravity and forms a film ("Rollin film"). Here, the Rollin film covers the interior of the larger, sealed container. After a short while, the levels of helium in the outer and inner containers will equalize.]]
  
'''Absolute zero''' is the lowest possible [[temperature]], such that nothing could be colder and no [[heat]] energy remains in the material being examined. At this temperature, the molecules stop moving, with minimal or no [[vibration]]al motion, retaining only [[Quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical]], [[zero-point energy]]*-induced particle motion.
+
'''Absolute zero''' is the lowest possible [[temperature]], such that nothing could be colder and no [[heat]] energy remains in the material being examined. At this temperature, the molecules stop moving, with minimal or no [[vibration]]al motion, retaining only [[Quantum mechanics|quantum mechanical]], [[zero-point energy]]-induced particle motion.
  
 
By [http://www1.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter2/2-1/2-1-1/kelvin.html international agreement,] absolute zero is defined as precisely:
 
By [http://www1.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter2/2-1/2-1-1/kelvin.html international agreement,] absolute zero is defined as precisely:
*0 K on the [[Kelvin]] scale, which is a [[thermodynamic temperature]]* (or absolute temperature) scale, and
+
*0 K on the [[Kelvin]] scale,<ref>Note that the degree symbol (°) is not used for the Kelvin temperature scale.</ref> which is a [[thermodynamic temperature]] (or absolute temperature) scale, and
 
*–273.15 °C on the [[Celsius]] scale.
 
*–273.15 °C on the [[Celsius]] scale.
Absolute zero is also precisely equivalent to:
+
In addition, absolute zero is precisely equivalent to:
*0 R on the [[Rankine]]* scale, a lesser-used thermodynamic temperature scale, and
+
*0 °R on the [[Rankine]] scale, a lesser-used thermodynamic temperature scale, and
 
*–459.67 °F on the [[Fahrenheit]] scale.
 
*–459.67 °F on the [[Fahrenheit]] scale.
  
Although scientists cannot fully achieve a state of “zero” heat energy in a substance, they have made great advances in achieving temperatures that draw ever closer to absolute zero, where matter exhibits odd [[Bose–Einstein condensate|quantum effects]]. In 1994, the [[National Institute of Standards and Technology]]* (NIST) achieved a record cold temperature of 700&nbsp;[[Kelvin#SI prefixed forms of kelvin|nK]] (nanokelvin, or 10<sup>-9</sup>&nbsp;K). In 2003, researchers at [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]* (MIT) eclipsed this with a new record of 450&nbsp;[[Kelvin#SI prefixed forms of kelvin|pK]] (picokelvin, or 10<sup>-12</sup>&nbsp;K).
+
The ''ratios'' of two absolute temperatures, ''T''<sub>2</sub>/''T''<sub>1</sub>, are the same in all scales.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
Although scientists working in the field of [[cryogenics]] cannot fully achieve a state of “zero” heat energy in a substance, they have made great advances in achieving temperatures that draw ever closer to absolute zero, where matter exhibits odd [[Bose-Einstein condensate|quantum effects]]. The emergence of dramatically new properties of substances near absolute zero illustrates the fact that under extreme conditions, simple extrapolations of the known laws of physics and chemistry become invalid. These experiments have time and again shown up the limitations of existing theory and pointed the way to a more profound understanding of matter.  
  
 
==Record cold temperatures approaching absolute zero==
 
==Record cold temperatures approaching absolute zero==
 +
It can be shown from the laws of [[thermodynamics]] that absolute zero can never be achieved artificially, though it is possible to reach temperatures arbitrarily close to it through the use of [[cryocooler]]s. This is the same principle that ensures no [[machine]] can be 100 percent efficient.
  
It can be shown from the laws of [[thermodynamics]] that absolute zero can never be achieved artificially, though it is possible to reach temperatures arbitrarily close to it through the use of [[cryocoolers]]*. This is the same principle that ensures no [[machine]]* can be 100% efficient.
+
At very low temperatures in the vicinity of absolute zero, matter exhibits many unusual properties including [[superconductivity]], [[superfluid]]ity, and [[Bose-Einstein condensate|Bose-Einstein condensation]]. To study such phenomena, scientists have worked to obtain ever lower temperatures.
  
At very low temperatures in the vicinity of absolute zero, matter exhibits many unusual properties including [[superconductor|superconductivity]], [[superfluid]]ity, and [[Bose-Einstein condensate|Bose-Einstein condensation]]. To study such [[phenomenon|phenomena]]*, [[scientist]]*s have worked to obtain ever lower temperatures.
+
*In 1994, the [[National Institute of Standards and Technology]] (NIST) achieved a record cold temperature of 700&nbsp;[[Kelvin#SI prefixed forms of kelvin|nK]] (nanokelvin, or 10<sup>-9</sup>&nbsp; K).  
  
*In September 2003, researchers at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]* announced a record cold temperature of 450&#160;picokelvin (pK), or 4.5&#160;×&#160;10<sup>-10</sup>&#160; K, in a Bose-Einstein condensate of sodium atoms. This was performed by [[Wolfgang Ketterle]]* and colleagues at MIT.<ref>Leanhardt, A. ''et al.'' (2003) ''Science'' '''301''' 1513. [http://physicsweb.org/article/news/7/9/8 Physicsweb news report]</ref>
+
*In September 2003, researchers at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] announced a record cold temperature of 450&#160;picokelvin (pK), or 4.5&#160;×&#160;10<sup>-10</sup>&#160; K, in a Bose-Einstein condensate of sodium atoms. This was performed by [[Wolfgang Ketterle]] and colleagues at MIT.<ref>Leanhardt, A. ''et al.'' ''Science'' 301 (2003): 1513. Online news report: Belle Dumé, [http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2003/sep/12/bose-einstein-condensates-break-temperature-record “Bose-Einstein condensates break temperature record.”] ''PhysicsWeb'', September 12, 2003. Retrieved March 20, 2018.</ref>
  
*As of February 2003, the [[Boomerang Nebula]]*, with a temperature of 1.15&#160; K, is the coldest place known outside a laboratory. The [[nebula]] is [[1 E19 m|5000 light-years]]* from [[Earth]] and is in the constellation [[Centaurus]]*.<ref>[http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/02/20/1045638427695.html Press report February 21 2003]</ref>
+
*As of February 2003, the [[Boomerang Nebula]], with a temperature of 1.15&#160; K, is the coldest place known outside a laboratory. The [[nebula]] is five thousand light-years from [[Earth]] and is in the constellation [[Centaurus]].
  
*As of November 2000, nuclear spin temperatures below 100 pK were reported for an experiment at the Low Temperature Lab of the [[Helsinki University of Technology]]*. This, however, was the temperature of one particular type of motion&mdash;a quantum property called nuclear spin&mdash;not the overall average thermodynamic temperature for all possible degrees of freedom.<ref>The experimental methods and results are presented in detail in T.A. Knuuttila’s Ph.D. thesis, which can be accessed from [http://www.hut.fi/Yksikot/Kirjasto/Diss/2000/isbn9512252147/ this site]. The university’s press release on its achievement is [http://ltl.hut.fi/Low-Temp-Record.html here.]</ref>
+
*As of November 2000, nuclear spin temperatures below 100 pK were reported for an experiment at the Low Temperature Lab of the [[Helsinki University of Technology]]. This, however, was the temperature of one particular type of motion&mdash;a quantum property called nuclear spin&mdash;not the overall average thermodynamic temperature for all possible degrees of freedom.<ref>The experimental methods and results are presented in detail in T. A. Knuuttila’s Ph.D. thesis. Tauno Knuuttila, [http://ltl.hut.fi/Low-Temp-Record.html World record in low temperatures] Retrieved March 20, 2018.</ref>
  
 
==Thermodynamics near absolute zero==
 
==Thermodynamics near absolute zero==
At 0&nbsp;K, (nearly) all molecular motion ceases and <math>\Delta</math>''S''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 for any [[adiabatic process]]*. Pure substances can (ideally) form perfect [[crystal]]s as ''T''&nbsp;<math>\rightarrow</math>0. [[Max Planck|Planck's]]* strong form of the [[third law of thermodynamics]]* states that the [[entropy]] of a perfect crystal vanishes at absolute zero. However, if the lowest energy state is [[degenerate energy level|degenerate]]* (more than one [[microstate (statistical mechanics)|microstate]]*), this cannot be true. The original [[Walther Nernst|Nernst]]* ''heat theorem'' makes the weaker and less controversial claim that the entropy ''change'' for any isothermal process approaches zero as ''T''&nbsp;→&nbsp;0
+
 
 +
=== Molecular motion in crystals ===
 +
At 0&nbsp;K, (nearly) all molecular motion ceases and the change in entropy<ref>An increase of entropy has often been defined as a change to a more disordered state on a molecular level. Conversely, a decrease in entropy is associated with a change to a more ordered molecular state. Spontaneous changes occur with an increase in entropy. Recently, entropy has been interpreted in terms of the "dispersal" of energy.</ref> is zero (<math>\Delta</math>''S''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0) for any [[adiabatic process]].<ref>An adiabatic process is one in which no heat transfer takes place.</ref> Pure substances can (ideally) form perfect [[crystal]]s as the temperature approaches absolute zero (''T''&nbsp;<math>\rightarrow</math>0). According to [[Max Planck|Planck's]] strong form of the [[third law of thermodynamics]], the [[entropy]] (''S'') of a perfect crystal vanishes at absolute zero. This prediction, however, cannot be valid if the lowest energy state for the substance is [[degenerate energy level|degenerate]]&mdash;that is, if the substance can exist in more than one [[microstate (statistical mechanics)|microstate]]s of energy.
 +
 
 +
The original [[Walther Nernst|Nernst]] ''heat theorem'' makes the weaker and less controversial claim that the ''change'' of entropy ''S'') for any isothermal process approaches zero as the temperature approaches absolute zero (''T''&nbsp;→&nbsp;0):
  
 
:<math> \lim_{T \to 0} \Delta S = 0 </math>
 
:<math> \lim_{T \to 0} \Delta S = 0 </math>
  
which implies that the entropy of a perfect crystal simply approaches a constant value.
+
This equation implies that the entropy of a perfect crystal simply approaches a constant value. "The Nernst postulate identifies the isotherm T&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 as coincident with the adiabat S&nbsp;=&nbsp;0, although other isotherms and adiabats are distinct. As no two adiabats intersect, no other adiabat can intersect the T&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 isotherm. Consequently no adiabatic process initiated at nonzero temperature can lead to zero temperature” (Callen, 189-190). An even stronger assertion is that "it is impossible by any procedure to reduce the temperature of a system to zero in a finite number of operations" (Guggenheim, 157).
 
 
''The Nernst postulate identifies the isotherm T&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 as coincident with the adiabat S&nbsp;=&nbsp;0, although other isotherms and adiabats are distinct. As no two adiabats intersect, no other adiabat can intersect the T&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 isotherm. Consequently no adiabatic process initiated at nonzero temperature can lead to zero temperature.'' (≈&nbsp;Callen, pp. 189-190)
 
  
An even stronger assertion is that ''It is impossible by any procedure to reduce the temperature of a system to zero in a finite number of operations.'' (≈&nbsp;Guggenheim, p. 157)
+
A perfect crystal is one in which the internal [[lattice (group)|lattice]] structure extends uninterrupted in all directions. The perfect order can be represented by translational [[symmetry]] along three (not usually [[orthogonality|orthogonal]]) [[Cartesian coordinate system|axes]]. Every lattice element of the structure is in its proper place, whether it is a single atom or molecular grouping. For [[chemical substance|substances]] that have two (or more) stable crystalline forms, such as [[diamond]] and [[graphite]] for [[carbon]], there is a kind of "chemical degeneracy." The question remains whether both can have zero entropy at ''T''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 even though each is perfectly ordered.
  
A perfect crystal is one in which the internal [[lattice (group)|lattice]]* structure extends uninterrupted in all directions. The perfect order can be represented by translational [[symmetry]]* along three (not usually [[orthogonality|orthogonal]]*) [[Cartesian coordinate system|axes]]*. Every lattice element of the structure is in its proper place, whether it is a single atom or a molecular grouping. For [[chemical substance|substances]]* that have two (or more) stable crystalline forms, such as [[diamond]] and [[graphite]] for [[carbon]], there is a kind of "chemical degeneracy". The question remains whether both can have zero entropy at ''T''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 even though each is perfectly ordered.
+
Perfect crystals never occur in practice. Imperfections, and even entire amorphous materials, simply get "frozen in" at low temperatures, so that transitions to more stable states do not occur.
  
Perfect crystals never occur in practice; imperfections, and even entire amorphous materials, simply get "frozen in" at low temperatures, so transitions to more stable states do not occur.
+
=== Drop in specific heat and various thermodynamic quantities ===
 +
Using the [[Peter Debye|Debye]] model, the [[specific heat capacity|specific heat]]<ref>Specific heat (or specific heat capacity) is defined as the amount of [[energy|heat energy]] required to raise the [[temperature]] of a given amount of a substance by one degree.</ref> and entropy of a pure crystal are proportional to ''T''<sup>&nbsp;3</sup>, while the [[enthalpy]] (''H'')<ref>The enthalpy of a system is also known as the "heat content" of a system. If heat is released during a chemical or physical process, the heat content of the system decreases; conversely, if heat is absorbed during the process, the heat content of the system increases.</ref> and [[chemical potential]]<ref>The chemical potential of a thermodynamic system is defined as the amount by which the energy of the system would change if an additional particle were introduced, when the entropy and volume remain unchanged. If a system contains more than one species of particle, a separate chemical potential is associated with each species, defined as the change in energy when the number of particles of that species is increased by one.</ref> are proportional to ''T''<sup>&nbsp;4</sup> (Guggenheim, 111). Based on this model, one may predict that as the temperature approaches absolute zero, these quantities drop toward their limiting values and approach with ''zero'' slopes.
  
Using the [[Peter Debye|Debye]]* model, the [[specific heat capacity|specific heat]]* and entropy of a pure crystal are proportional to ''T''<sup>&nbsp;3</sup>, while the [[enthalpy]]* and [[chemical potential]]* are proportional to ''T''<sup>&nbsp;4</sup>. (Guggenheim, p. 111) These quantities drop toward their ''T''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 limiting values and approach with ''zero'' slopes. For the specific heats at least, the limiting value itself is definitely zero, as borne out by experiments to below 10&nbsp;K. Even the less detailed [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]] model shows this curious drop in specific heats. In fact, all specific heats vanish as absolute zero, not just those of crystals. Likewise for the coefficient of [[thermal expansion]]*. [[Maxwell relations|Maxwell's relations]]* show that various other quantities also vanish. These [[phenomenon|phenomena]]* were unanticipated.
+
In the case of specific heats at least, the limiting value itself is zero, as borne out by experiments conducted below 10&nbsp;K. Even the less detailed [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]] model shows this curious drop in specific heats. These models indicate that all specific heats vanish at absolute zero, not just those of crystals. Likewise for the coefficient of [[thermal expansion]]. [[Maxwell relations|Maxwell's relations]] show that various other quantities also vanish. These [[phenomenon|phenomena]] were unanticipated.
  
Since the relation between changes in the [[Gibbs free energy]]*, the enthalpy and the entropy is
+
=== Changes during chemical reactions ===
 +
The relationship between changes in [[Gibbs free energy]] (Δ''G''),<ref>The Gibbs free energy of a system is a thermodynamic potential that measures the amount of "useful" work obtainable from the system at constant temperature and pressure.</ref> enthalpy (Δ''H''), and entropy (Δ''S'') is given by the following equation:
  
 
:<math> \Delta G = \Delta H - T \Delta S \,</math>
 
:<math> \Delta G = \Delta H - T \Delta S \,</math>
  
it follows that as ''T'' decreases, Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' approach each other (so long as Δ''S'' is bounded). [[Experiment]]ally, it is found that most [[chemical reaction]]s are [[exothermic reaction|exothermic]]* and release heat ''in the direction'' they are found to be going, toward [[thermodynamic equilibrium|equilbrium]]*. That is, even at [[room temperature]]* ''T'' is low enough so that the fact that (Δ''G'')<sub>''T,P''</sub>&nbsp;<&nbsp;0 (usually) implies that Δ''H''&nbsp;<&nbsp;0. (In the opposite direction, each such reaction would of course absorb heat.)
+
From this equation, it follows that as ''T'' decreases, Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' approach each other (so long as Δ''S'' remains unchanged). [[Experiment]]ally, it is found that most [[chemical reaction]]s are [[exothermic reaction|exothermic]] in the direction they are going&mdash;that is, they release heat as they move toward [[thermodynamic equilibrium]]. For an exothermic reaction, Δ''H'' has a negative value (Δ''H''&nbsp;<&nbsp;0). Even at [[room temperature]], ''T'' is low enough so that the fact that (Δ''G'')<sub>''T,P''</sub>&nbsp;<&nbsp;0 (usually) implies that Δ''H''&nbsp;<&nbsp;0. On the other hand, if the reaction were moving in the opposite direction, it would absorb heat, and Δ''H'' would have a positive value.
  
More than that, the ''slopes'' of the temperature derivatives of Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' converge and ''are equal to zero'' at ''T''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0, which ensures that Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' are nearly the same over a considerable range of temperatures, justifying the approximate [[empiricism|empirical]]* [[Principle of Thomsen and Berthelot]]*, which says that ''the equilibrium state to which a system proceeds is the one which evolves the greatest amount of heat'', i.e., an actual process is the ''most exothermic one''. (Callen, pp. 186-187)
+
Moreover, the ''slopes'' of the temperature derivatives of Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' converge and ''are equal to zero'' at ''T''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0. Consequently, Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' are nearly the same over a considerable range of temperatures. This relationship between Δ''G'' and Δ''H'' justifies the approximate [[empiricism|empirical]] [[principle of Thomsen and Berthelot]], which says that ''the equilibrium state to which a system proceeds is the one that evolves the greatest amount of heat''. In other words, an actual process is (usually) the ''most exothermic one'' (Callen, 186-187).
 
 
==Absolute temperature scales==
 
 
 
As mentioned, absolute or [[thermodynamic temperature]]* is conventionally measured in [[kelvin]]s (Celsius-size degrees), and increasingly rarely in the [[Rankine]]* scale (Fahrenheit-size degrees). Absolute temperature is uniquely determined up to a multiplicative constant which specifies the size of the "degree", so the ''ratios'' of two absolute temperatures, ''T''<sub>2</sub>/''T''<sub>1</sub>, are the same in all scales. The most transparent definition comes from the classical [[Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution]]* over energies, or from the quantum analogs: [[Fermi-Dirac statistics]]* (particles of half-integer [[spin (physics)|spin]]*) and [[Bose-Einstein statistics]]* (particles of integer spin), all of which give the relative numbers of particles as (decreasing) [[exponential function]]*s of energy over ''kT''. On a [[macroscopic]]* level, a definition can be given in terms of the efficiencies of "reversible" [[heat engine]]s operating between hotter and colder thermal reservoirs.
 
  
 
==Negative temperatures==
 
==Negative temperatures==
 
+
Certain semi-isolated systems (for example a system of non-interacting spins in a magnetic field) can achieve "negative" temperatures. They, however, are not actually colder than absolute zero. They can be thought of as "hotter than T=∞", as energy will flow from a negative temperature system to any other system with positive temperature upon contact.
Certain semi-isolated systems (for example a system of non-interacting spins in a magnetic field) can achieve negative temperatures; however, they are not actually colder than absolute zero. They can be however thought of as "hotter than T=∞", as energy will flow from a negative temperature system to any other system with positive temperature upon contact.
 
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
 
* [[Celsius]]
 
* [[Celsius]]
 
* [[Fahrenheit]]
 
* [[Fahrenheit]]
Line 66: Line 67:
 
* [[Temperature]]
 
* [[Temperature]]
  
==Footnotes==
+
==Notes==
 
<references />
 
<references />
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
+
* Baierlein, Ralph. ''Thermal Physics''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521658381
* Shachtman, Tom (2000). ''Absolute Zero and the Conquest of Cold''. First Mariner Books Edition. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN-10: 0618082395; ISBN-13: 978-0618082391.
+
* Callen, Herbert B. ''Thermodynamics''. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1966. ISBN 978-0471130352
 
+
* Enss, Christian, and Siegfried Hunklinger. ''Low-Temperature Physics''. New York: Springer-Verlag, 2005. ISBN 3540231641
* Enss, Christian, and Hunklinger, Siegfried (2005). ''Low-Temperature Physics''. Berlin and Heidelberg (Germany); New York, NY: Springer-Verlag. ISBN-10: 3540231641; ISBN-13: 978-3540231646.
+
* Guggenheim, E. A. ''Thermodynamics: An Advanced Treatment for Chemists and Physicists''. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1986. ISBN 978-0444869517
 
+
* Kent, Anthony. ''Experimental Low-Temperature Physics''. New York: American Institute of Physics, 1993. ISBN 1563960303
* Mendelssohn, Kurt (1977). ''The Quest for Absolute Zero: The Meaning of Low Temperature Physics''. (2d ed edition). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN-10: 0470991488; ISBN-13: 978-0470991480.
+
* Mendelssohn, Kurt. ''The Quest for Absolute Zero: The Meaning of Low Temperature Physics'' (Second edition). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 1977. ISBN 0470991488
 
+
* Rushbrooke, G. S. ''Introduction to Statistical Mechanics''. Clarendon Press, Reprint edition, 1949. {{ASIN|B0000EGLDF}}
* Kent, Anthony (1993). ''Experimental Low-Temperature Physics''. New York, NY: American Institute of Physics. (First published in 1993, Hampshire and London, UK: The Macmillan Press.) ISBN-10: 1563960303; ISBN-13: 978-1563960307.
+
* Shachtman, Tom. ''Absolute Zero and the Conquest of Cold''. First Mariner Books Edition. New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 2000. ISBN 0618082395
 
 
* Baierlein, Ralph (1999). ''Thermal Physics''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN-10: 0521658381; ISBN-13: 978-0521658386.
 
 
 
* {{cite book | author=Herbert B. Callen | title=Thermodynamics, Chapter 10 | publisher=John Wiley & Sons, Inc. | year=1960}}Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 60-5597.
 
* {{cite book | author=E.A. Guggenheim | title=Thermodynamics: An Advanced Treatment for Chemists and Physicists, 5th ed. | publisher=North Holland; John Wiley & Sons, Inc. | year=1967}}Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 60-20003.
 
* {{cite book | author=G. S. Rushbrooke | title=Introduction to Statistical Mechanics | publisher=Oxford Univ. Press | year=1949}}
 
  
 
[[Category:Physical sciences]]
 
[[Category:Physical sciences]]

Latest revision as of 15:10, 24 March 2018

Near absolute zero (0 K), matter exhibits strange properties. For example, below a temperature of 2.1768 K (the "lambda point"), helium is a superfluid that "creeps" along surfaces against the force of gravity and forms a film ("Rollin film"). Here, the Rollin film covers the interior of the larger, sealed container. After a short while, the levels of helium in the outer and inner containers will equalize.

Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature, such that nothing could be colder and no heat energy remains in the material being examined. At this temperature, the molecules stop moving, with minimal or no vibrational motion, retaining only quantum mechanical, zero-point energy-induced particle motion.

By international agreement, absolute zero is defined as precisely:

  • 0 K on the Kelvin scale,[1] which is a thermodynamic temperature (or absolute temperature) scale, and
  • –273.15 °C on the Celsius scale.

In addition, absolute zero is precisely equivalent to:

  • 0 °R on the Rankine scale, a lesser-used thermodynamic temperature scale, and
  • –459.67 °F on the Fahrenheit scale.

The ratios of two absolute temperatures, T2/T1, are the same in all scales.

Although scientists working in the field of cryogenics cannot fully achieve a state of “zero” heat energy in a substance, they have made great advances in achieving temperatures that draw ever closer to absolute zero, where matter exhibits odd quantum effects. The emergence of dramatically new properties of substances near absolute zero illustrates the fact that under extreme conditions, simple extrapolations of the known laws of physics and chemistry become invalid. These experiments have time and again shown up the limitations of existing theory and pointed the way to a more profound understanding of matter.

Record cold temperatures approaching absolute zero

It can be shown from the laws of thermodynamics that absolute zero can never be achieved artificially, though it is possible to reach temperatures arbitrarily close to it through the use of cryocoolers. This is the same principle that ensures no machine can be 100 percent efficient.

At very low temperatures in the vicinity of absolute zero, matter exhibits many unusual properties including superconductivity, superfluidity, and Bose-Einstein condensation. To study such phenomena, scientists have worked to obtain ever lower temperatures.

  • In 1994, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) achieved a record cold temperature of 700 nK (nanokelvin, or 10-9  K).
  • In September 2003, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced a record cold temperature of 450 picokelvin (pK), or 4.5 × 10-10  K, in a Bose-Einstein condensate of sodium atoms. This was performed by Wolfgang Ketterle and colleagues at MIT.[2]
  • As of February 2003, the Boomerang Nebula, with a temperature of 1.15  K, is the coldest place known outside a laboratory. The nebula is five thousand light-years from Earth and is in the constellation Centaurus.
  • As of November 2000, nuclear spin temperatures below 100 pK were reported for an experiment at the Low Temperature Lab of the Helsinki University of Technology. This, however, was the temperature of one particular type of motion—a quantum property called nuclear spin—not the overall average thermodynamic temperature for all possible degrees of freedom.[3]

Thermodynamics near absolute zero

Molecular motion in crystals

At 0 K, (nearly) all molecular motion ceases and the change in entropy[4] is zero (S = 0) for any adiabatic process.[5] Pure substances can (ideally) form perfect crystals as the temperature approaches absolute zero (T 0). According to Planck's strong form of the third law of thermodynamics, the entropy (S) of a perfect crystal vanishes at absolute zero. This prediction, however, cannot be valid if the lowest energy state for the substance is degenerate—that is, if the substance can exist in more than one microstates of energy.

The original Nernst heat theorem makes the weaker and less controversial claim that the change of entropy (ΔS) for any isothermal process approaches zero as the temperature approaches absolute zero (T → 0):

This equation implies that the entropy of a perfect crystal simply approaches a constant value. "The Nernst postulate identifies the isotherm T = 0 as coincident with the adiabat S = 0, although other isotherms and adiabats are distinct. As no two adiabats intersect, no other adiabat can intersect the T = 0 isotherm. Consequently no adiabatic process initiated at nonzero temperature can lead to zero temperature” (Callen, 189-190). An even stronger assertion is that "it is impossible by any procedure to reduce the temperature of a system to zero in a finite number of operations" (Guggenheim, 157).

A perfect crystal is one in which the internal lattice structure extends uninterrupted in all directions. The perfect order can be represented by translational symmetry along three (not usually orthogonal) axes. Every lattice element of the structure is in its proper place, whether it is a single atom or molecular grouping. For substances that have two (or more) stable crystalline forms, such as diamond and graphite for carbon, there is a kind of "chemical degeneracy." The question remains whether both can have zero entropy at T = 0 even though each is perfectly ordered.

Perfect crystals never occur in practice. Imperfections, and even entire amorphous materials, simply get "frozen in" at low temperatures, so that transitions to more stable states do not occur.

Drop in specific heat and various thermodynamic quantities

Using the Debye model, the specific heat[6] and entropy of a pure crystal are proportional to T 3, while the enthalpy (H)[7] and chemical potential[8] are proportional to T 4 (Guggenheim, 111). Based on this model, one may predict that as the temperature approaches absolute zero, these quantities drop toward their limiting values and approach with zero slopes.

In the case of specific heats at least, the limiting value itself is zero, as borne out by experiments conducted below 10 K. Even the less detailed Einstein model shows this curious drop in specific heats. These models indicate that all specific heats vanish at absolute zero, not just those of crystals. Likewise for the coefficient of thermal expansion. Maxwell's relations show that various other quantities also vanish. These phenomena were unanticipated.

Changes during chemical reactions

The relationship between changes in Gibbs free energy (ΔG),[9] enthalpy (ΔH), and entropy (ΔS) is given by the following equation:

From this equation, it follows that as T decreases, ΔG and ΔH approach each other (so long as ΔS remains unchanged). Experimentally, it is found that most chemical reactions are exothermic in the direction they are going—that is, they release heat as they move toward thermodynamic equilibrium. For an exothermic reaction, ΔH has a negative value (ΔH < 0). Even at room temperature, T is low enough so that the fact that (ΔG)T,P < 0 (usually) implies that ΔH < 0. On the other hand, if the reaction were moving in the opposite direction, it would absorb heat, and ΔH would have a positive value.

Moreover, the slopes of the temperature derivatives of ΔG and ΔH converge and are equal to zero at T = 0. Consequently, ΔG and ΔH are nearly the same over a considerable range of temperatures. This relationship between ΔG and ΔH justifies the approximate empirical principle of Thomsen and Berthelot, which says that the equilibrium state to which a system proceeds is the one that evolves the greatest amount of heat. In other words, an actual process is (usually) the most exothermic one (Callen, 186-187).

Negative temperatures

Certain semi-isolated systems (for example a system of non-interacting spins in a magnetic field) can achieve "negative" temperatures. They, however, are not actually colder than absolute zero. They can be thought of as "hotter than T=∞", as energy will flow from a negative temperature system to any other system with positive temperature upon contact.

See also

Notes

  1. Note that the degree symbol (°) is not used for the Kelvin temperature scale.
  2. Leanhardt, A. et al. Science 301 (2003): 1513. Online news report: Belle Dumé, “Bose-Einstein condensates break temperature record.” PhysicsWeb, September 12, 2003. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  3. The experimental methods and results are presented in detail in T. A. Knuuttila’s Ph.D. thesis. Tauno Knuuttila, World record in low temperatures Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  4. An increase of entropy has often been defined as a change to a more disordered state on a molecular level. Conversely, a decrease in entropy is associated with a change to a more ordered molecular state. Spontaneous changes occur with an increase in entropy. Recently, entropy has been interpreted in terms of the "dispersal" of energy.
  5. An adiabatic process is one in which no heat transfer takes place.
  6. Specific heat (or specific heat capacity) is defined as the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a given amount of a substance by one degree.
  7. The enthalpy of a system is also known as the "heat content" of a system. If heat is released during a chemical or physical process, the heat content of the system decreases; conversely, if heat is absorbed during the process, the heat content of the system increases.
  8. The chemical potential of a thermodynamic system is defined as the amount by which the energy of the system would change if an additional particle were introduced, when the entropy and volume remain unchanged. If a system contains more than one species of particle, a separate chemical potential is associated with each species, defined as the change in energy when the number of particles of that species is increased by one.
  9. The Gibbs free energy of a system is a thermodynamic potential that measures the amount of "useful" work obtainable from the system at constant temperature and pressure.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Baierlein, Ralph. Thermal Physics. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521658381
  • Callen, Herbert B. Thermodynamics. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1966. ISBN 978-0471130352
  • Enss, Christian, and Siegfried Hunklinger. Low-Temperature Physics. New York: Springer-Verlag, 2005. ISBN 3540231641
  • Guggenheim, E. A. Thermodynamics: An Advanced Treatment for Chemists and Physicists. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1986. ISBN 978-0444869517
  • Kent, Anthony. Experimental Low-Temperature Physics. New York: American Institute of Physics, 1993. ISBN 1563960303
  • Mendelssohn, Kurt. The Quest for Absolute Zero: The Meaning of Low Temperature Physics (Second edition). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 1977. ISBN 0470991488
  • Rushbrooke, G. S. Introduction to Statistical Mechanics. Clarendon Press, Reprint edition, 1949. ASIN B0000EGLDF
  • Shachtman, Tom. Absolute Zero and the Conquest of Cold. First Mariner Books Edition. New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 2000. ISBN 0618082395

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