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4 answers

Third Law Of Thermodynamics (I am studying that too)

It is impossible to reduce the temperature of any system to absolute zero by a finite number of operations.

If you are asking how much internal energy ice has at -273K, then the answer is zero.

Good luck with this.

2006-06-14 22:29:06 · answer #1 · answered by None of your business 2 · 1 0

zero
for something to be at absolute zero it possesses no thermal energy.

Was that a trick question?


Refrigeration on the other hand is a different kettle of fish. Energy required depends on the refrigerant and the material being chilled

2006-06-14 22:20:34 · answer #2 · answered by mofuonamotorcycle 5 · 0 0

Its internal energy is the energy due to its mass alone.

Therfore it will have an internal energy of 1 kg or in terms of joules it is 8.988x10^16 joules

2006-06-15 01:17:24 · answer #3 · answered by Pearlsawme 7 · 0 0

Not possible....it would collapse before it would get to 0 K.
You can get real close, but you can't get there. Sorry.

2006-06-14 22:16:25 · answer #4 · answered by KiWi 3 · 0 0

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