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What is Absolute Zero in Fahrenheit?

Answer – Absolute zero is –459.67 °F.

Explanation: 

Absolute zero is the temperature at which a thermodynamic system has the least amount of energy. It corresponds to zero kelvin, which is equal to –273.15 °C. In Fahrenheit, this value is –459.67 °F. The particles of the system exhibit minimal vibrational motion at this temperature.

Reaching 0 K has not been possible thus far. The closest that scientists have been able to get to it has been less than one billionth of a kelvin. However, in 2021, a temperature of 38 picokelvins, or 38 × 10⁻¹² K, was achieved for a brief 2 seconds while working with the fifth state of matter, the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC).


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