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- Temperature abstract "A temperature is a numerical measure of hot and cold. Its measurement is by detection of heat radiation or particle velocity or kinetic energy, or by the bulk behavior of a thermometric material. It may be calibrated in any of various temperature scales, Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin, etc. The fundamental physical definition of temperature is provided by thermodynamics.Measurements with a small thermometer, or by detection of heat radiation, can show that the temperature of a body of material can vary from time to time and from place to place within it. If changes happen too fast, or with too small a spacing, within a body, it may be impossible to define its temperature.Within a body that exchanges no energy or matter with its surroundings, temperature tends to become spatially uniform as time passes. When a path permeable only to heat is open between two bodies, energy always transfers spontaneously as heat from a warmer body to a cooler one. The transfer rate depends on the nature of the path. Between two bodies with the same temperature, no heat flows. These bodies are said to be in thermal equilibrium.The kinetic theory offers a valuable but limited account of the behavior of the materials of macroscopic systems. It indicates the absolute temperature as proportional to the average kinetic energy of the random microscopic motions of their constituent microscopic particles such as electrons, atoms, and molecules.The coldest theoretical temperature is called absolute zero. It can be approached but not reached in any actual physical system. It is denoted by 0 K on the Kelvin scale, −273.15 °C on the Celsius scale, and −459.67 °F on the Fahrenheit scale. In matter at absolute zero, the motions of microscopic constituents are minimal.Temperature is important in all fields of natural science, including physics, geology, chemistry, atmospheric sciences and biology.".
- Temperature thumbnail MonthlyMeanT.gif?width=300.
- Temperature wikiPageExternalLink SECT1WEB.PDF.
- Temperature wikiPageExternalLink GLP.htm.
- Temperature wikiPageExternalLink EN-CLC-AVRT-C.
- Temperature wikiPageExternalLink nature11595.html.
- Temperature wikiPageExternalLink p12_s1.
- Temperature wikiPageID "20647050".
- Temperature wikiPageRevisionID "604624983".
- Temperature hasPhotoCollection Temperature.
- Temperature subject Category:Concepts_in_physics.
- Temperature subject Category:Heat_transfer.
- Temperature subject Category:Physical_quantities.
- Temperature subject Category:State_functions.
- Temperature subject Category:Temperature.
- Temperature subject Category:Thermodynamics.
- Temperature comment "A temperature is a numerical measure of hot and cold. Its measurement is by detection of heat radiation or particle velocity or kinetic energy, or by the bulk behavior of a thermometric material. It may be calibrated in any of various temperature scales, Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin, etc.".
- Temperature label "Temperatur".
- Temperature label "Temperatura".
- Temperature label "Temperatura".
- Temperature label "Temperatura".
- Temperature label "Temperatura".
- Temperature label "Temperature".
- Temperature label "Temperatuur".
- Temperature label "Température".
- Temperature label "Температура".
- Temperature label "درجة حرارة".
- Temperature label "温度".
- Temperature label "温度".
- Temperature sameAs Teplota.
- Temperature sameAs Temperatur.
- Temperature sameAs Θερμοκρασία.
- Temperature sameAs Temperatura.
- Temperature sameAs Tenperatura.
- Temperature sameAs Température.
- Temperature sameAs Suhu.
- Temperature sameAs Temperatura.
- Temperature sameAs 温度.
- Temperature sameAs 온도.
- Temperature sameAs Temperatuur.
- Temperature sameAs Temperatura.
- Temperature sameAs Temperatura.
- Temperature sameAs m.07gr_.
- Temperature sameAs Q11466.
- Temperature sameAs Q11466.
- Temperature wasDerivedFrom Temperature?oldid=604624983.
- Temperature depiction MonthlyMeanT.gif.
- Temperature isPrimaryTopicOf Temperature.