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And there is no reason why a single molecular interaction should depend (at least to the first order) on the kinetic energy of any other molecules.
It would be impossible to observe any effect because for every interaction A -> B there will be, somewhere, an equal and opposite B->A, due to the definition of temperature. So how do you choose which molecule to observe?
"Thermal fluctuation" implies a change in temperature.Either you are going to alter the average internal kinetic energy of something (i.e. change its temperature) or not.
One part of an object can increase its temperature while another part decrease its temperature, thus the average temperature doesn't change.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 13/06/2022 23:47:36One part of an object can increase its temperature while another part decrease its temperature, thus the average temperature doesn't change.The problem with sating that (well one problem) is the temperature of something is always an average.So what you are saying is that the average changes, but the average doesn't change.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 15/06/2022 08:48:32Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 13/06/2022 23:47:36One part of an object can increase its temperature while another part decrease its temperature, thus the average temperature doesn't change.The problem with sating that (well one problem) is the temperature of something is always an average.So what you are saying is that the average changes, but the average doesn't change.You forget to distinguish between local and global temperature.
Hi. I don't suppose I've managed to read every post since I was last here but I think I've got the gist. I have to strongly agree with what @alancalverd and @Bored chemist have just tried to say: It is dangerous and difficult to try and consider "local temperature" when you're considering a volume so small that you have only a few molecules. It makes very little sense to model that volume as one homogeneous body with many particles that have an average kinetic energy corresponding to the given temperature (because it just does not have many particles - so by assuming it has you're almost bound to get nonsense results and consequences). Yes, the phrase "local temperature" is used frequently but not on those small scales. The weather presenter will tell you that the temperature of the air in Spain is different to the temperature in Canada. However that's still millions of particles of Nitrogen that exist in a given region. It is reasonable to model that volume and number of particles as one homogeneous body with a well defined temperature.Best Wishes.
Can we measure the temperature of water in a 1 cubic micron?What's the guarantee that its temperature is exactly the same as its neighboring water body?
Can we measure the temperature of water in a 1 cubic micron?
I'm going to say no, not reliably or meaningfully.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 16/06/2022 14:02:28Can we measure the temperature of water in a 1 cubic micron?What's the guarantee that its temperature is exactly the same as its neighboring water body?Over what timescale?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 16/06/2022 17:19:10Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 16/06/2022 14:02:28Can we measure the temperature of water in a 1 cubic micron?What's the guarantee that its temperature is exactly the same as its neighboring water body?Over what timescale?Whatever needed by a measuring device / method to produce conclusive result.