Questions tagged [temperature]

A measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a sample of matter; may be expressed either in kelvin (symbol K) or in degree Celsius (symbol °C).

The thermodynamic temperature (quantity symbol: T) is one of the base quantities in the International System of Quantities (ISQ), on which the International System of Units (SI) is based. Thermodynamic temperature can be measured with a primary thermometer, examples of which are constant volume gas thermometers, acoustic thermometers, or total radiation thermometers.

The unit of thermodynamic temperature is the kelvin (unit symbol: K), which is the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water.

The Celsius temperature (quantity symbol: t or ϑ) is defined as t = T − T0, where T is thermodynamic temperature (see above) and T0 := 273.15 K. The thermodynamic temperature T0 is exactly 0.01 K below the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water.

The unit name degree Celsius (unit symbol: °C) is a special name for the kelvin for use in stating values of Celsius temperature: 1 °C := 1 K

The units of thermodynamic and Celsius temperature difference or change are identical. Such differences or changes may be expressed either in kelvin (unit symbol K) or in degree Celsius (unit symbol °C).

The unit degree Rankine (unit symbol °R) is a non-SI unit of thermodynamic temperature T:
1 °R := 5/9 K.
The use of this unit is deprecated.

The unit degree Fahrenheit (unit symbol °F) is a non-SI unit of Fahrenheit temperature tF:
tF/°F := (9/5) (t/°C) + 32 = (9/5) (T/K) − 459.67
The use of this unit is deprecated.

It should be noted that the symbol K (for kelvin), the symbol °C (for degree Celsius), the symbol °R (for degree Rankine), and the symbol °F (for degree Fahrenheit) shall be preceded by a space when one expresses values of temperature.

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Is there an uncertainty associated with the value 0 K for absolute zero?

When I say absolute zero, I’m not talking about the hypothetical temperature 0 K; I’m talking about the temperature at which a thermodynamic system has the lowest energy. Everywhere I look, sites maintain that this should be –273.15 ºC, but I can’t…
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Is there a chemical reaction that speeds up when the temprature gets lower?

We were talking about chemical reaction speed on our chemistry class, and I asked my teacher if there is a chemical reaction that speeds up when the temprature gets lower? I think this is not everyday chemistry and my teacher didn't have an example…
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How are hot and cold defined?

My teacher asked me this question a few days ago. "How to define hot and cold?" And I said, "The higher the temperature, the hotter you are. The lower the temperature the colder you are." But my teacher said, "That's not 100 percent correct." So,…
Simon-Nail-It
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What are the degrees of freedom that define the temperature of an ionic solid (such as sodium azide)?

Degrees of freedom describe the different ways atoms move in a sample. For a pure ideal gas made of non-linear molecules, there are 3N degrees of freedom (N is the number of atoms in the molecule), 3N-6 of which are vibrational, 3 rotational and 3…
Karsten
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Thermometer fluid is separated, defective?

I bought a thermometer from Cole-Parmer having kerosene as the fluid, and the fluid is broken up. The fluid in the bottom part goes up to about 10 °C even though it is 20 °C in the room, then there is a gap followed by fluid between 23 °C and 25 °C,…
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At which temperature does carbon monoxide explode?

I had doubt whether carbon monoxide explodes or not. I checked out this resource and found out that carbon monoxide explodes when heated. But they didn't mention the temperature at which it explodes. So my question is that at which temperature does…
AAD INO
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what contributes to the temperature of a vacuum

what is the temperature of Vacuum since temperature of a system is related to the average of the molecular kinetic energy and there is no molecule in a vacuum? i know there could be radiations but i want to know how much the contribution is?
adi_chem
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Unable to find sources for uncommon specific heat

I'm calculating the energy, temperature, and gas volume outputs of gunpowder. To solve this I need to find the specific heat of Potassium sulfate (K2SO4) and Potassium carbonate (K2CO3). If anyone can refer me to any directory that can list the…
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Is temperature just the phenomenon of particles colliding against an object?

This is just something that I thought up while doing busy work at my job. Is the sensation of heat simply coming from particles colliding with your, say, hand? Are they transferring energy more to objects because they have higher velocities, and…
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How can cooling gases do not change their physical states?

It is stated in my book "All gases condense to form liquids or solids before -273.15 degree Celsius is reached? could you explain this statement generally and my question in the title specifically?
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How many significant figures?

In Brown, Theodore E.; LeMay, H. Eugene; Bursten, Bruce E.; Murphy, Catherine; Woodward, Patrick; Stoltzfus, Matthew E.. Chemistry: The Central Science (Page 35). Pearson Education. Kindle Edition, an assignment is: Make the following conversions:…
eromod
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Difference between the absolute thermodynamic scale and ITS-90

What is the difference between the absolute thermodynamic temperature scale and the practical temperature scale: ITS-90?
Ronalds
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Is the relation [K] = [C] + 273.15 exact?

In reading Atkins' Physical Chemistry, the first section of the first Chapter, the author says that the conversion equation between the absolute temperature and celsius is exact and at the same time the author explains that the Kelvin is defined by…
Alice
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Reaction rate and temperature

I recall being told that for a given reaction, every 10 degree rise in temperature the reaction rate approximately doubles. Is this true?
John Webb
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What happens to air at 1000 degrees Celsius

I was looking at the graphs for the density of air at different temperatures (link below) and I was wondering if air would not react with itself at high temperatures? I read that oxygen and nitrogen react at 1600 degrees Celsius, but even below that…
Anters Bear
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