The force of habit always makes your thing seem easier.
Not in wrath
the Reaper came today.
this gray path
And took the cube away.
The force of habit always makes your thing seem easier.
Kelvin is more advanced. As of 273 (or is it 272?) that is the freezing point of water. 372 is the boiling point.
Celsius is good when you want to measure temperatures on food. While Kelvin is good for scientists. And Fahrenheit is good for... Something...
For how temperature feels when you're outside?
WHAT?
That question is illogical!
OH NOES!
*BOOM*
Kelvin is more closely related the speed particles are moving, while Celcius and Fahrenheit are relative to other stuff.
Kelvin is based on Celsius. Only that 0 Kelvin = the lowest temperature possible.
Yeah, but at 0 K (theoretically the particles of a gas are not moving at all and take zero mass.
0 K is when there is no thermal energy what so ever. So, yea, basically what Nyubis is saying. No moving (not even vibration) of particles.
That was what I was trying to say. The higher the speed the higher the temperature.
We're not learning anything at all from each other...
The speed of the particles, in essence, don't dictate the temperature. But the vice versa. The higher the temperature, the faster the particles move.
Man, when did this turn into a Science lesson.
Science is fun
I can't exactly remember if the no-mass rule counted only for a gas, but I believe it did.
Also, In an attempt to reach 0 K, Kelvin himself (I think) brought the temperature in a box to 0.00000007 K. So close.
That's amazing.
Another fun Kelvin trivia fact:
In electronics, the Kelvin unit is used as an indicator of how noisy a circuit is in relation to an ultimate noise floor, i.e. the noise temperature.
I didn't know sound had a temperatue
You didn't?
Well. If you think about it...
Sound is a nontangible entity, it has no mass, temperature, etc. It is just vibrations. It has vibration speed and that sort of stuff.
The speed of the particles, in essence, don't dictate the temperature. But the vice versa. The higher the temperature, the faster the particles move.
Man, when did this turn into a Science lesson.
No! Must...post...desktop!
For Christmas:
big
*prepares for flaming over non-religious image that appears religious*
Although at any given time, my desktop really looks something more like this:
big
Man, maybe you do need multiple work-spaces if your desktop is so cluttered most of the time. You'd be surprised how productive it can be.
At Uni, the Linux cluster has 4 workspaces for each computer and it can help a lot.
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