Absolute Zero and Absolute Hot
Absolute zero is a relatively simple concept; there’s a defined, final temperature for cold, which is minus 273.15ºC (or 0 kelvin). At that temperature, particles stop vibrating and all heat is leached from the affected system. It was thought to be as cold as anything can go, ever.
The laboratory record for the coldest temperature is one billionth of a kelvin. In nature, the coldest temperature recorded was 1 kelvin, from an outgassing nebula far off in space. But even if the universe goes on forever and experiences “heat death,” absolute zero could take an unthinkably vast time to be reached, and it may never happen at all in nature.
Is there another end to this scale – a ceiling, or theoretical maximum temperature? Theoretically, the Planck Temperature (100 million million million million million degrees C) is the highest temperature that can be achieved, but the Hagedorn Temperature is even higher, at 2 x 1012 degrees.
That’s a lot of zeros. And it could go further, depending on how nature is built at the fundamental level.
Let’s start by getting a sense of scale. Exceeding fire, which humans can easily get to reach over 3,400ºC, is no problem for nature. Lightning on Earth creates a white hot explosion of plasma that reaches 27,000ºC. That’s almost five times hotter than the surface of the sun. Anyone who’s been close to a lightning strike can attest to the heat a bolt can give off.
The sun’s corona has a temperature of a few million degrees kelvin – nobody knows for certain how hot it really is, or why the sun’s surface is cooler than the space around it, and it remains one of nature’s great mysteries. There are two prominent theories; one claims that sound-like waves heat the corona from the interior, the other that the sun’s magnetic field is responsible.
Humans have managed to achieve temperatures of around 4,000,000,000,000ºC (4 trillion degrees) in the Large Hadron Collider, but only for a fraction of a second.
Absolute zero and absolute hot aren’t compatible ideas – even though they try to describe the same thing. While we’re quite sure that absolute zero (while not achievable) exists, we have no idea about the upper limits, because there isn’t enough energy to reach those lofty heights.
But ideas are starting to form around non-linear temperature; a loop of energy that allows for infinite temperature. It’s an utterly bizarre concept, where particles with negative temperatures (below absolute zero) have even more energy than those with positive temperature. It’s shining a light on the mystery of dark energy and rewriting the rulebooks of nature.
Thanks to our fascination with fire and temperature, we’re discovering more about heat, fire and nature than we’d ever thought imaginable.
Better Understanding for Better Safety
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