Spyke
cmbabulreply
lemmy.world

Yeah I’ll get excited after it gets peer reviewed

48
lemmy.world

Yeah the headline makes you think it's even within "normal" temperatures, and then you see that it's like 10°C below above Absolute Zero.

13
lemmy.world

Even if it was somehow 10° below absolute zero, it would still be 10° above absolute zero

-5
GiveMemesreply
jlai.lu

I thought negative Kelvin were sometimes used to describe very very high temperatures but I could be wrong.

Thanks for the downvotes y'all, enjoy being wrong:

" Negative absolute temperatures (or negative Kelvin temperatures) are hotter than all positive temperatures - even hotter than infinite temperature."

-3

Lmao I was kind of making a joke there, it's an absolute scale so a negative number can't actually exist, i.e. |-10| = 10

Additionally, temperatures expressed as negative Kelvin aren't actually negative Kelvin in reality ("reality" meaning the actual physical existence in our material world) because, as you pointed out, the material would actually be more temperate. Negative Kelvin is useful to represent systems where adding energy decreases the entropy of the system, rather than the standard of increasing entropy, but to relate it to the actual heat or energy of the material gets murky.

1
lemmy.ml

superconducting below 10K or -263C. a record but by no means room temperature.

49

Loads of things superconduct below 10K - aluminium for one. This is for a different type of superconductor that can be turned on and off with a magnetic field.

24

Not quite in the usable temp for engineering yet but definitely on the right path. And a wee bit less sketchy than the last one. That combine with the progress is fusion reactors. We have a bright future in energy ahead of us (but pretty grim everywhere else)

14

Very cool, I didn't know a toggleable superconductor was even possible. With all this research into superconductivity it's only a matter of time before a room-temperature superconductor is found.

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You reached the end

U.S. Govt and researchers seemingly discover new type of superconductivity in an exotic, crystal-like material — controllable variation breaks temperature records | Spyke