JocktheMotie
Habitual Fi LineStepper
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2008
- Messages
- 8,497
Does space have energy? It doesn't have mass at all, so it has no Kinetic Energy, and hence reaches absolute zero right? Are people saying that you can only apply temperature when/where there is mass?
*is yet to read most of ygolo's refered post which probably contains the answer*
While vacuum has no intrinsic energy, there is a small amount of electromagnetic radiation present almost uniformly throughout the universe, and I think it's something like 2 kelvin. Vacuum won't transfer it's absolute zero temperature to you...because there's nothing there. Your temperature in that vacuum is going to be determined by the amount of light energy on you at the time. Like Halla said, "sunny sides" of planets can be 200 degrees and then the dark sides are -200 degrees because there's no atmosphere to hold the sun energy.