Physics, asked by Naimun98, 7 months ago

at which temperature no thermal energy can be removed and why? explain

Answers

Answered by VIVEKPARIDA
1

Answer:

Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature where nothing could be colder and no heat energy remains in a substance. Absolute zero is the point at which the fundamental particles of nature have minimal vibrational motion, retaining only quantum mechanical, zero-point energy-induced particle motion.

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Answered by TheSiddharthNigam
2

Explanation:

Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature where nothing could be colder and no heat energy remains in a substance. ... By international agreement, absolute zero is defined as precisely; 0 K on the Kelvin scale, which is a thermodynamic (absolute) temperature scale; and –273.15 degrees Celsius on the Celsius scale.

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