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Does Absolute Zero Generate Involute Space?
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RascalPuff
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Does Absolute Zero Generate Involute Space? - 05-06-2007, 01:54 AM

Microcosmic test objects have been cryogenically subjected to 'temperatures' approaching minus 273o Centigrade. But the goal of 'Absolute Zero' has yet to be achieved, and ST suggests that Absolute Zero (Kelvin) may not be achievable; that it may not be possible to stop all motion - molecular or otherwise in any given test object. Though laboratory experimentation has come very close to inducing Absolute Zero in a given test object...

Question: How 'close' is 'very close' in this consideration?

Thermodynamically, it occurs to this record that in the offered circumstances and pursuit, 'an inch is as good as a mile'. My intuition (and my work on relativity) suspects (and suggests) that if and when Absolute Zero is achieved - when all (molecular, atomic and subatomic motion) is stopped in a given test object, that entity will implode. Becoming as three dimensionally small and dense as the four dimensional universe around it becomes relatively large and tenuous, squared (forever). That is to summarize: the consummation of a Schwartzchild radius and the creation of a black hole...

May the Reader please tell me what their thoughts are on this consideration?

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