Monday, October 24, 2011

The Kelvin Temperature Scale

 
Here in the United States, we measure temperature in Fahrenheit. Most of the rest of the world uses the metric system and measures temperature in Celsius. In the mid 1800's, scientists came up with a new system  to measure temperature called the Kelvin scale. The Kelvin scale ranges from absolute zero (the point at which all movement inside atoms ceases) to infinity. This type of "absolute" temperature scale is more scientifically accurate than Fahrenheit or Celsius as "0" is the coldest an object could ever theoretically get. This scale is easier to understand conceptually, and works nicely when doing calculations. We can relate the three scales by noting that the freezing point of water (0 C, 32 F) is equivalent to ~273 Kelvin (K), and "room temperature" is about 300K. The Kelvin scale is handy for astronomy as it helps put the temperature of astronomical objects into perspective. The cosmic microwave background (which is what "fills" what we perceive as outer space) is about 2.7K. The surface of the sun is ~6000K, and the sun's corona is about 2,000,000K! When put into perspective, humans are only accustomed to living in a temperature range that spans ~40K, whereas the universe has objects whose temperatures range from practically zero to billions of Kelvin!