At absolute zero (0 K or -273 ˚C), according to the kinetic theory of heat, particle movement should stop. |
“It appears that the ‘extreme cold’ [absolute zero] of this thermometer is that which would reduce the air by its ‘spring’, to sustain no load at all.”— Guillaume Amontons (1703), Publication [4]
“Irvine’s particular theory was basically very simple in that the took the concept of ‘quantity of heat’ to its logical conclusion. Each and every body, according to Irving, contains a certain ‘absolute quantity of heat’, which is fixed by its heat capacity and its absolute temperature. If, for any reason, the heat capacity of a body should change then it must either emit or absorb heat; thus, the heats of combustion, of chemical reactions in general and the latent heats of fusion and vaporization are merely the consequences of abrupt changes in the heat capacities of the substances concerned. In fact, all productions or absorptions of heat indicate changes in heat capacity. Now this theorem enabled Irvine and his followers to calculate the absolute zero of temperature.”— Donald Cardwell (1971), From Watt to Clausius (pg. 55)
The division by zero problem: as x approaches 0 from the right, in the function y = 1/x, the value of y approaches infinity. As x approaches 0 from the left, y approaches minus infinity. On this logic, in the function S = Q/T, s approaches infinity as T approaches 0, for both positive or negative values of heat flow. |