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Strictly speaking, if you increase the temperature of a "thing" sufficiently, it ceases to be a thing and turns into a liquid (having no defined shape it's a "stuff" rather than a "thing") then a gas, then atoms and finally plasma.
Depends on what constitutes temperature? Is it on atomic level or subatomic level, is the temperature considered to be on the substance in question or the measuring device. For example how could you ever measure temperature without the substance in question loosing some energy.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 15/05/2022 00:48:01Depends on what constitutes temperature? Is it on atomic level or subatomic level, is the temperature considered to be on the substance in question or the measuring device. For example how could you ever measure temperature without the substance in question loosing some energy.Temperature is the mean internal kinetic energy of a mesoscopic body. It has no meaning for an individual particle.You can in principle measure temperature without net heat loss by detecting the heat flow between the subject body at TS and a reference at TR. when there is no flow, TS = TR.
How do you detect it if energy is not leaving the system?
how would you measure the temperature of a fly?
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 15/05/2022 12:36:56How do you detect it if energy is not leaving the system?When you don't detect it coming or going, it isn't transferring. Therefore the subject and the reference must be at the same temperature.A clever way to do this (at least in principle) is to put your sample and a small thermopile at the foci of two spherical mirrors facing one another. You heat the thermopile by passing a current through it, and measure its temperature by measuring the voltage across it when you switch off the heating current. If the sample and the thermopile are at the same temperature its voltage won't change with time immediately after switchoff. But as I remarked elsewhere, practical heat experiments are very difficult to do! The experiment was originally devised in response to an interview question:how would you measure the temperature of a fly?
You look at the thermopile voltage and rate of change.V α TthermopiledV/dt α ΔT (thermopile - fly)
If the thermopile is heating up, then it is doing so by gaining energy from the fly or whatever.And that means the fly is cooling down.So you are not measuring the fly, you are cooling it.If the thermopile is cooling then you are warming the fly.
Now what do you deduce if dV/dt = 0?